This shows how the I-Xray software works, from capturing the image to aggregating the data
In what might be described as a real-life Black Mirror episode, a Harvard student uses facial recognition with $379 Meta Ray-Ban 2 smart sunglasses - to dig up personal data on every face it sees in real time.
If you've ever cared about your privacy, now might be the time to grab the tin foil hat. I've already got mine on.
AnhPhu Nguyen, a junior at Harvard University, uses the livestreaming feature of his Meta Ray-Ban 2 smart glasses while a connected computer monitors the feed in real-time. He employs publicly available AI-powered facial recognition software to detect faces and scour the internet for more images of those individuals.
He then uses databases like voter registration and online articles to gather names, addresses, phone numbers, next of kin, and even social security numbers.
All of this data is scraped together using an LLM (Large Language Model) similar to ChatGPT which aggregates the data into a searchable profile that's fed straight back to his phone.
This entire process takes only seconds from being captured discretely on camera to being displayed on his phone, giving off real life Cyberpunk 2077 vibes.
Nguyen has been very poignant to say that he's not done any of this for nefarious or malicious purposes. He's even published a small "how to" remove your information from some of the databases he uses to scrape your personal data. He wants to raise awareness of the implications this type of technology presents.
While he offers a "solution" to help protect yourself, it's really a small drop in a very large bucket that very well may never have a solution. Or maybe the solution will be wearing smart glasses of your own with Infrared Lights constantly blinding other facial recognition cameras?
Unfortunately, bad actors (hackers that act maliciously) have already broken into many websites and databases, including in April of this year, when information on 3 billion people, including every single social security number in existence was stolen from the background check company National Public Data and posted on the Dark Web.
With the proliferation of AI over just the last few years, one has come to expect to see it used in new and inventive ways ... even if that carries a negative connotation, like deep fakes and disinformation to trick the masses into believing whatever narrative the creator wants them to believe.
For now, Nguyen says he's not releasing his software dubbed I-Xray.
But if a smart college kid has already "cracked the code", imagine what's already happening behind the curtains. At least I think that was the lesson Edward Snowden was trying to tell us.