When Technology Moves Faster Than Ethics
A Call to Businesses, Universities, Teachers, and Communities
By Tina Winterlik (Zipolita)
We are living through a moment where technology is moving faster than our ethics, faster than our laws, and faster than our public awareness.
Devices like the Ray-Ban Meta Smart Glasses, developed by Meta and EssilorLuxottica, allow people to record video almost invisibly. What looks like a simple pair of sunglasses can capture photos, video, and livestream what someone sees.
Most people nearby may have no idea they are being recorded.
Recent reporting has also revealed that some footage used to train artificial intelligence systems is reviewed by workers overseas, including in places like Kenya.
That means private moments captured by a wearable camera could potentially be seen by strangers thousands of kilometers away.
This raises serious questions about privacy, consent, and power.
⚠️ But the biggest concern may be this:
Technology is spreading faster than our ability to understand it or regulate it.
A Message to Business Owners πͺ
If you own a cafΓ©, a store, or any public-facing business, you may soon face situations where customers or staff are wearing recording devices.
Do you have a policy?
Do your employees know what to do if someone is secretly filming customers?
Businesses may need to start thinking about privacy signage, clear policies, and staff training.
A Message to Professors and Universities π
Universities helped create many of these technologies.
Now they must help society understand them.
AI ethics, digital privacy, and surveillance technology should not be niche topics hidden in computer science departments. They should be part of:
- journalism courses
- law programs
- sociology classes
- education training programs
Students must graduate understanding the world they are entering.
A Message to Teachers and Schools π
High school students are already living in a world of cameras, social media, and artificial intelligence.
But many are not being taught the risks.
Students should learn about:
- consent when filming others
- digital footprints
- online exploitation
- AI training and hidden human labor
- ethical use of technology
Teaching these topics early helps young people become responsible digital citizens.
A Message to Communities and Seniors π΅π΄
Many elderly people have no idea that wearable cameras even exist.
That makes them especially vulnerable to exploitation.
Community centres could play an important role by hosting free workshops about digital safety, helping people understand:
- how wearable cameras work
- how AI uses images and video
- how to protect privacy in public spaces
Communities that learn together are communities that stay safer.
Possible Scenarios We Should Be Preparing For ⚠️
Scenario 1
Someone wearing smart glasses records people inside a small business without permission.
The footage ends up online, where viewers make cruel comments about customers.
How should the business respond?
Should laws protect the people who were filmed?
Scenario 2
A student secretly records classmates in a school hallway and uploads clips to social media.
The video spreads quickly and humiliates someone.
What responsibility does the school have?
What consequences should exist?
Scenario 3
A wearable camera accidentally captures sensitive information — a credit card number, a private conversation, or a medical discussion.
Who is responsible if that information spreads?
The person wearing the device?
The platform hosting the video?
The company that created the technology?
What Communities Could Do Right Now π️
Waiting for governments alone may not be enough.
Communities can start acting today.
Ideas include:
• Digital literacy workshops at libraries and community centres
• Public discussions about AI and privacy
• School programs about ethical technology use
• Clear business policies about recording in private spaces
• Advocacy for stronger privacy laws
When people understand technology, they are less likely to be exploited by it.
Ten Reflective Questions Journalists Should Be Asking π€
1️⃣ Should wearable cameras require visible recording indicators so people know they are being filmed?
2️⃣ What legal protections exist for someone who is secretly recorded and posted online without consent?
3️⃣ Are technology companies moving too fast compared to the laws meant to protect the public?
4️⃣ Who is responsible when AI training data contains private or sensitive footage?
5️⃣ Are low-wage workers reviewing private footage being adequately protected and compensated?
6️⃣ Should businesses and schools have the right to ban wearable recording devices?
7️⃣ What rights do citizens have when their image is captured unintentionally in AI training data?
8️⃣ How prepared are police and courts to deal with crimes involving wearable cameras?
9️⃣ Are governments investing enough in digital literacy for the public?
π What ethical responsibility do tech companies have before releasing powerful new surveillance tools?
The Bigger Question
Technology is not slowing down.
The real question is whether our ethics, laws, and education systems can catch up in time.
If we want a future where technology empowers people instead of exploiting them, we need to act now — together.
Business owners.
Teachers.
Journalists.
Students.
Community leaders.
Everyone has a role to play.
Because in a world where cameras can be hidden in plain sight, awareness may be our most powerful protection. ✨
*Last Thoughts*
A camera used to be something you could see.
Now it may be hidden in a pair of sunglasses.
In a world where anyone might be recording, the most important question becomes simple:
Who is protecting the people being watched?πππ¬π₯Ίπ©π½π€¬π€’⏳️⌛️π