How to avoid being recorded by smart glasses: a practical guide
Smart glasses are becoming common in cafes, transit, and workplaces. This guide focuses on what actually helps in everyday life: proximity and situational awareness. It does not promise perfect prevention — and no app can prove whether someone is recording you.
What does not work (and why)
Some ideas sound decisive but fail in practice or create new problems:
- Blocking lenses — You generally cannot safely or legally interfere with someone else's eyewear. It is confrontational and unreliable.
- Jamming Bluetooth — Radio jamming is illegal in many countries, affects innocent devices, and does not stop offline recording anyway.
- Assuming silence means safety — Many cameras and microphones do not advertise themselves over Bluetooth at all.
The realistic goal is not total control over every lens nearby. It is making informed choices about where and how you share sensitive information.
Signal matches are proximity hints, not proof
Product truth: When a tool reports that a nearby signal may match a known smart-glasses pattern, that is an indicator of possible hardware proximity — not absolute proof of active video recording. Someone may wear compatible glasses without recording; someone may record with a device that never appears in a Bluetooth scan.
Treat alerts as prompts to pay attention, not as courtroom evidence. Calm situational awareness beats alarmist certainty.
Public transit and crowded spaces
- Choose your seat mindfully — If you are discussing finances, health, or workplace secrets, consider whether a quiet corner or a later moment is better than a packed carriage.
- Lower your voice — Distance and noise still matter more than any radio signal. Assume microphones exist; assume bystanders can hear you.
- Pause before identifying people — Names, addresses, and credentials are high-value in a dense crowd.
- Notice posture, not paranoia — Someone facing you with still hands may simply be reading. Awareness is about context, not suspicion of every passer-by.
Conversational boundaries
- Ask directly when appropriate — In semi-private settings (a meeting room, a dinner table), it is reasonable to ask whether anyone is recording.
- Move the conversation — Step outside, switch to a phone call later, or use a channel you control.
- Agree on norms — Teams and friend groups can set simple rules: no recording without consent, phones face-down, glasses off during sensitive topics.
- Separate location from content — The same sentence can be low-risk in a park and high-risk on a packed train.
Local-first tools (optional)
Unrecorded is one optional, local-first Android utility in this space. While the app is open in the foreground, it scans for nearby Bluetooth Low Energy signals that may match patterns associated with known smart glasses and wearable recording devices. It then shows a calm privacy-risk level with plain-English explanations.
- Processing stays on your device — no cloud upload of scan data.
- No account is required.
- Observations are merged in memory during a session, not stored as a long-term log of people nearby.
Unrecorded is designed to complement your judgment, not replace it. For technical detail on how BLE broadcasts work, see Understanding smart glasses BLE broadcasts.
What Unrecorded cannot do
- It cannot prove someone is recording.
- It cannot detect every camera or microphone.
- It cannot guarantee that a nearby signal belongs to smart glasses.
- It cannot prevent recording — only help you notice possible nearby hardware patterns.
- It should be treated as a privacy awareness tool, not a security guarantee.