Smart glasses have always had an obvious privacy concern, and a new BBC investigation just showed us why. A woman identified as Alice was approached by a man in a London shopping centre while he was wearing smart glasses. She thought it was a normal interaction and did not realize she was being recorded. The footage was later uploaded online and viewed around 40,000 times.
Where everything went wrong
Content creators or influencers recording unassuming pedestrians isn’t new—and is often harmless. But the story took a darker turn after Alice contacted the creator after she saw the video online. She explained to the person that it made her feel humiliated and asked for it to be removed. In an email response, the man allegedly called the removal a “paid service.” Alice described the experience as a breach of privacy and said it left her feeling exploited and powerless.
The man, who reportedly runs multiple accounts across TikTok and Instagram, did not reveal his identity and told BBC that his content was meant to show “light-hearted, respectful interactions”. He further added that the payment wording was a misunderstanding related to editing services. However, Alice said she had only asked for the video to be deleted.
Why privacy laws struggle here

The case highlights a difficult gap between wearable camera technology and privacy protections. Legal experts quoted in the report said the situation may not fit the standard definition of blackmail, but refusing to remove a video unless someone pays can still be considered a threat. The issue is quite unsettling because smart glasses do not look like a phone pointed at someone’s face, and many modern models can record from the wearer’s point of view, making public interactions easier to capture without the obvious warning.
Smart glasses aren’t inherently the problem. Though the ecosystem around them, with creators chasing engagement, platforms rewarding humiliation clips, and victims fighting for removal, is painting a bleak picture.

