This contact lens can put human rights in danger
Sony is making smart contact lenses with video recording functions wherever you are.
Sony is making smart contact lenses with video recording functions wherever you are.
Recently, the media has just learned that Japanese technology company Sony has filed a patent on an extremely "magical device".
It's a smart contact lens that has many functions like sci-fi movies: filming, playing videos, and . launching straight to the network thanks to the wifi system.
So what's inside this glass?
Sony's smart contact lenses are integrated with antennas, cameras, photovoltaic displays, motion sensors, and storage devices.
In particular, the most special feature of this glasses is that it is operated based on . winking . Even just blinking, the camera can autofocus, adjust brightness, and zoom in and out "like a movie".
Due to its own storage device, the recorded video can be saved in contact lenses or users can use wireless connection to send video to their smartphone.
The photoelectric display attached to the contact lens will help to re-record the recorded video. In particular, due to the close contact with the pupils' eyes, the images projected from contact lenses are of a higher quality than the devices that play video outside like Google Glass .
However, there are many people who are concerned that smart glasses that go into mass production will cause the security and privacy of people to go to dead ends. Sneaking is going to explode, especially when the person who owns the glass is a man with depraved blood.
Currently, apart from Sony, there are two technology giants who are also involved in smart contact lenses, Google and Samsung.
January and April in 2014, Google filed two patents on smart contact lenses. The first is a contact lens for diabetics with a sensor that measures the amount of chemicals in tears and then calculates the blood glucose level. The second model integrates a small camera that helps blinds navigate in dangerous situations, such as when crossing the street, by processing image data and then transmitting information to a connected smartphone to notify the danger. front.
In the same year as Google, South Korean technology firm Samsung filed a patent for contact lenses that could take pictures only with blinking movements, and images after being taken will be sent to users' smartphones.
Although there are personal privacy concerns, or most of the equipment is still in the prototype stage, but with these features, when it comes to mass production, smart contact lenses will probably be is one of the technological devices that helps people effectively.
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