PunterHub

Welcome to Punter Hub! The future home of the best punter community in New Zealand.

Don’t wear glasses 🤓 when visiting an escort

The problem is…how to guarantee the consent ? She can say “yeah that would be fine” Then later changes her mind and makes a complaint. You will need to record her voice saying yes or bring a document where she needs to sign giving consent.
 
The problem is…how to guarantee the consent ? She can say “yeah that would be fine” Then later changes her mind and makes a complaint. You will need to record her voice saying yes or bring a document where she needs to sign giving consent.
Good point. It has always been verbal consent for me. I should probably get it in text to be on the safe side.
 
I was considering this the other day, with consent of course... Holding a phone while fucking just kills the mood. But Meta Glasses aren't that great yet :unsure:
And also some of those point of view male porn actors use goofy devices to attach their cameras to their heads or chests which probably kills the mood for the girl. So maybe glasses would be better, but not sure how good the video quality is!
 
y’all got links with no paywall? 😭


Meta in row after workers who say they saw smart glasses users having sex lose jobs
30 April 2026

Share

Save

Add as preferred on Google
Chris Vallance
Senior technology reporter
AFP via Getty Images A set of black Meta Ray-Ban smart glasses on a table.AFP via Getty Images
Meta is under pressure to explain why it cancelled a major contract with a company it was using to train AI, shortly after some of its Kenya-based workers alleged they had to view graphic content captured by Meta smart glasses.

In February, workers at the company, Sama, told two Swedish newspapers they had witnessed glasses users going to the toilet, and having sex.

Less than two months later, Meta ended its contract with Sama, which Sama said would result in 1,108 workers being made redundant.

Meta says it's because Sama did not meet its standards, a criticism Sama rejects. A Kenyan workers' organisation alleges Meta's decision was caused by the staff speaking out.

Meta has not addressed that allegation but told BBC News in a statement it had "decided to end our work with Sama because they don't meet our standards".

Sama has defended its work.

"Sama has consistently met the operational, security and quality standards required across our client engagements, including with Meta," it said in a statement.

"At no point were we notified of any failure to meet those standards, and we stand firmly behind the quality and integrity of our work."

'Naked bodies'
In late February, Swedish newspapers Svenska Dagbladet (SvD) and Goteborgs-Posten (GP) published an investigation which included the accounts of unnamed workers who had been asked to review videos filmed by Meta's glasses.

"We see everything - from living rooms to naked bodies," one worker reportedly said.

At the time of the publication, Meta admitted subcontracted workers might sometimes review content filmed on its smart glasses when people shared it with Meta AI.

It said this was for the purpose of improving the customer experience, and was a common practice among other companies.

However, the revelations have prompted regulators to act.

Shortly after the Swedish investigation, the UK data watchdog, the Information Commissioners Office (ICO) wrote to Meta about what it called a "concerning" report.

The Office of the Data Protection Commissioner in Kenya also announced it was commencing an investigation into privacy concerns raised by the glasses.

In a statement in response to news of the redundancies a Meta spokesperson told the BBC, "last month, we paused our work with Sama while we looked into these claims.

"We take them seriously. Photos and videos are private to users. Humans review AI content to improve product performance, for which we get clear user consent."

'Standards of secrecy'
In September Meta unveiled a range of AI-powered glasses in partnership with brands Ray-Ban and Oakley.

Features can include translating text, or responding to questions about what the user is looking at - particularly useful for those who are blind or partially sighted.

However, as the devices have grown in popularity, so too have concerns about their misuse.

The workers the Swedish newspapers spoke to were data annotators, teaching Meta's AI to interpret images by manually labelling content.

The workers said they also reviewed transcripts of interactions with the AI to check it had answered questions adequately.

In one instance, a worker told the newspapers, a man's glasses were left recording in a bedroom where they later filmed a woman, apparently the man's wife, undressing.

Meta's glasses have a light in the corner of the frames that is turned on when the built-in camera is recording.

But misuse of the glasses has also been linked to non-consensual recording of women in Kenya.

Sama, a US headquartered outsourcing business, which began as a non-profit organisation with the aim of increasing employment through the provision of tech jobs, is now an "ethical" B-corp.

But this is not the first time a contract with Meta has soured.

An earlier deal to moderate Facebook posts attracted criticism, alongside legal action by former employees - some of whom described being exposed to graphic, traumatising content.

Sama later said it regretted taking the work.

Naftali Wambalo of the Africa Tech Workers Movement, who is a petitioner in the continuing legal action around that case, told the BBC he had also spoken with workers involved in the smart glasses contract.

Wambalo believed the reason for Meta's ending the work was that it didn't want workers speaking out about human workers sometimes reviewing content captured by the smart glasses.

"What I think are the standards they are talking about here are standards of secrecy," he told BBC News.

The BBC has asked Meta to respond to this point.

The tech giant has previously said that users were made aware of the possibility of human review in the its terms of service.

Mercy Mutemi a lawyer representing the petitioners, who is also executive director of campaign group the Oversight Lab, said Meta's statement should be a warning to the Kenyan government.

"We've been told that this is our entry route into the AI ecosystem," she told the BBC. "This is a very flimsy foundation to build your entire industry on."

Regulator contacts Meta over workers watching intimate AI glasses videos
What is AI and how does it work?
A green promotional banner with black squares and rectangles forming pixels, moving in from the right. The text says: “Tech Decoded: The world’s biggest tech news in your inbox every Monday.”
Sign up for our Tech Decoded newsletter to follow the world's top tech stories and trends. Outside the UK? Sign up here.

Social media
Kenya
Artificial intelligence
Meta
Mark Zuckerberg
Facebook
Related
My postpartum body should not be a talking point on social media
EU needs to delay social media access for children - von der Leyen
TikTok launches £3.99 subscription for no ads in UK
More from the BBC
OpenAI CEO Sam Altman in the lobby of a federal courthouse in California wearing a navy suit jacket, blue necktie and white dress shirt.
Elon Musk said control of OpenAI should go to his children, Sam Altman tells jury
Sam Altman said Elon Musk tried many times for total control of OpenAI, which he's now suing.

6 hrs ago
Macron and Ruto are facing each other, smiling and clasping hands. They are outdoors and there are four men behind them
France seeks to move beyond colonial ties by meeting African leaders in Kenya
In a first since these meetings started in the 1970s, this move reflects a change in France's thinking.

13 hrs ago
An autonomous inspection robot at one end of a long sewer pipe with water running along the bottom section (Credit: Pipeon project)
'Fatbergs' are a modern menace. Can we stop them?
Reeking coagulations of grease and debris are clotting city sewers on a colossal scale. New technologies are being used to control this modern menace.

15 hrs ago
A middle-aged man in a light grey and white striped shirt sits in front of a bookcase looking directly into the camera
Brother in Kenya for BBC charity worker inquest
Kate Mitchell, 42 - originally from Whitley Bay - was murdered in November 2021 at a Nairobi hotel.

19 hrs ago
Woodworking using a circular saw
Not so dusty: How tech is changing woodworking
Woodworking shops have been transformed by tech to make tools safer and more precise.

1 day ago
Home
News
Sport
Business
Technology
Health
Culture
Arts
Travel
Earth
Audio
Video
Live
Weather
BBC Shop
BritBox
BBC in other languages
Follow BBC on:






Terms of Use
Subscription Terms
About the BBC
Privacy Policy
Cookies
Accessibility Help
Contact the BBC
Advertise with us
Do not share or sell my info
BBC.com Help & FAQs
Content Index
Set Preferred Source
Copyright 2026 BBC. All rights reserved. The BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites. Read about our approach to external linking.
 
Glasses are useless. Imagine Daty and then her thighs clamp. ACC claim. Or if she was a torrent like Lulu. They’d short out due the water boarding effect. Explain those injuries !
 
Back
Top