By Mark Pesce
To work well, AR must look through our eyes, see the world as we do, and record what it sees. There seems no way to avoid this hard reality of augmented reality. So we need to ask ourselves whether we’d really welcome such pervasive monitoring, why we should trust AR providers not to misuse the information they collect, or how they can earn our trust. Sadly, there’s not been a lot of consideration of such questions in our rush to embrace technology’s next big thing. But it still remains within our power to decide when we might allow such surveillance—and to permit it only when necessary.
See the full article here: https://spectrum.ieee.org/computing/hardware/augmented-reality-and-the-surveillance-society