Close Menu
TechTost
  • AI
  • Apps
  • Crypto
  • Fintech
  • Hardware
  • Media & Entertainment
  • Security
  • Startups
  • Transportation
  • Venture
  • Recommended Essentials
What's Hot

Clicks shows off its BlackBerry-inspired phone in a new hands-on video

Blue Origin still doesn’t know why its New Glenn rocket blew up last month

Amazon launches new $1 billion FDE organization, following OpenAI and Anthropic

Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms and Conditions
  • Disclaimer
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
TechTost
Subscribe Now
  • AI

    Amazon launches new $1 billion FDE organization, following OpenAI and Anthropic

    30 June 2026

    The AI ​​jobs debate just got more confusing

    30 June 2026

    Robot hand company settles Tesla trade secret, announces $11 million raise

    29 June 2026

    OpenAI restricts GPT-5.6 release at government request, says restrictions shouldn’t be the norm

    29 June 2026

    Why Wall Street thinks US memory maker Micron is the next Nvidia

    28 June 2026
  • Apps

    X now offers an MCP server to make its platform easier for AI tools to use

    30 June 2026

    Gemini’s personalized AI image creation is now free for US users

    30 June 2026

    TIDAL is fighting AI music, cutting off monetization

    29 June 2026

    TikTok’s road to becoming a super app

    26 June 2026

    Adobe acquires image and video enhancement tools maker Topaz Labs

    26 June 2026
  • Crypto

    Crypto Exchange OKX wants AI agents to hire and pay each other

    30 June 2026

    Startup Battlefield 200 applications close today

    27 May 2026

    5 days left: Save up to $410 on Disrupt 2026 passes

    25 May 2026

    As crypto cools, a16z crypto raises $2.2 billion in capital

    6 May 2026

    Coinbase to lay off 14% of staff as part of broader restructuring

    5 May 2026
  • Fintech

    India’s payments chief believes artificial intelligence will play a big part in the next era of digital payments development

    28 June 2026

    Early Bird pricing ends tonight for the Founder Summit

    26 June 2026

    4 days left to save up to $190 on Founder Summit 2026

    23 June 2026

    Robinhood’s note on 10% layoffs shows that blaming AI doesn’t cut it

    17 June 2026

    Anthropic’s latest spat with the Trump administration may actually help it, sales figures suggest

    17 June 2026
  • Hardware

    Flipper’s new Busy Bar is a customizable display for productivity

    30 June 2026

    South Korea’s tech giants pledge over $550 billion to ease ‘RAMageddon’

    30 June 2026

    Pocket raises $11M in bet on growing demand for AI note-taking devices

    29 June 2026

    Govee’s smart nugget ice maker makes every frozen drink feel like luxury

    28 June 2026

    Apple Raises Mac and iPad Prices, Saves iPhone for Now

    26 June 2026
  • Media & Entertainment

    Watch out, Amazon: The Kobo eReader now has a Goodreads rival

    29 June 2026

    YouTube Shorts just got even shorter with an update that lets you double the playback speed

    25 June 2026

    Deezer says its new feature allows fans to remix songs with the artist’s consent

    24 June 2026

    Instagram looks set to take on streaming services with a longer, episodic and live format for its TV app

    22 June 2026

    Spotify’s reserved ticket sales to music superfans are now live

    18 June 2026
  • Security

    In major privacy victory, Supreme Court rules that geo-trafficking warrants are protected by privacy rights

    29 June 2026

    The Klue hack results in a data breach at several cybersecurity companies

    26 June 2026

    Cellebrite said it cut off Russia, but Russia used its tools anyway

    26 June 2026

    Hacked Klue Says Criminals Are Deleting Stolen Customer Data, But Now Other Hackers Are Making Threats

    25 June 2026

    Anthropic says Claude might want to see your ID

    25 June 2026
  • Startups

    Clicks shows off its BlackBerry-inspired phone in a new hands-on video

    30 June 2026

    Omen AI’s plan to optimize data centers is all wet

    30 June 2026

    Arena, the AI ​​leaderboard everyone uses, is now a $100 million business

    29 June 2026

    2 days left to save up to $190 on Founder Summit

    28 June 2026

    Asian AI startups launch Mythos-like models as Anthropic export ban extends

    27 June 2026
  • Transportation

    Blue Origin still doesn’t know why its New Glenn rocket blew up last month

    30 June 2026

    Waymo and Uber are quietly parting ways in Phoenix

    30 June 2026

    TechCrunch Mobility: All eyes on Tesla FSD

    28 June 2026

    Slate Auto’s radically simple electric truck starts at $24,950

    27 June 2026

    OpenAI poaches Uber India chief to lead its largest market outside the US

    26 June 2026
  • Venture

    Patronus AI lands $50 million to create ‘digital worlds’ that stress-test AI agents

    26 June 2026

    How to invest when everything is moving too fast

    24 June 2026

    After betting the company on Anthropic, Menlo Ventures raises $3 billion in winning capital

    24 June 2026

    Seedcamp Raises $320M for New Fund to Expand US Footprint

    22 June 2026

    The 11 startups that stood out from YC’s demo day, according to VCs

    19 June 2026
  • Recommended Essentials
TechTost
You are at:Home»Security»Harvard Dropouts to always start “AI Smart Glasses listening and recording every conversation
Security

Harvard Dropouts to always start “AI Smart Glasses listening and recording every conversation

techtost.comBy techtost.com20 August 202506 Mins Read
Share Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
Harvard Dropouts To Always Start "ai Smart Glasses Listening And
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

Two former Harvard students start a pair of “always” smart glasses with AI listening, recording and transferring each conversation and then displaying relevant information to the user in real time.

“Our goal is to make glasses that make you extremely smart when you put them in,” said Anhphu Nguyen, co -founder of HaloA starting that develops technology.

Or, as co -founder Caine Ardayfio, the glasses “give you infinite memory”.

“AI listens to every conversation you have and uses this knowledge to tell you what to say … like IRL Cluely,” Ardayfio told TechCrunch, referring to the start -up that helps users to “cheat” at all from work interviews in school exams.

“If someone says a complex word or asks you a question, such as,” What is 37 in the third force? “Or something like that, then it will appear in the glasses,” Ardayfio added.

Ardayfio and Nguyen have raised $ 1 million to develop glasses, led by Pillar VC, supported by Soma Capital, Village Global and Morningside Venture. The glasses will be priced at $ 249 and will be available for pre -order from Wednesday. Ardayfio called the glasses “the first real step towards Vibe’s thinking”.

The two abandonments of the Ivy League, who have since moved to their own version of Hacker In the San Francisco Gulf region recently caused a turbulence after the development of a Meta Smart-Ban Smart-Ban Glasses to prove that the Technology could be used for dox people. As a possible first antagonist in Meta’s smart glasses, Ardayfio said that Meta, given its historical security and privacy scandals, had to accelerate its product in ways that Halo could ultimately use.

TechCrunch event

Francisco
|
27-29 October 2025

“Meta does not have much reputation for the care of users’ privacy and to release something that is always there with you – which obviously brings a tone of utility – is just a huge risk of reputation for those who probably won’t get before starting on a scale,” he added.

And while Nguyen has a point, users may not yet have a good reason to trust the technology of some students playing students who are supposed to send people to the world with hidden recording equipment.

While Meta’s glasses have a light light when their cameras and microphones watch and hear as a mechanism to warn others that they are recorded, Ardayfio said Halo glasses, called Halo X, have no external index to warn the people of their customers.

“For the material we make, we want to be discreet, like normal glasses,” said Ardayfio, who added that the glasses record each word, transcribe it and then delete the audio file.

Privacy of privacy warns of normalizing the secrets to public registration.

“Small and discreet registration devices are not new,” Eva Galperin, director of cyber security at the Electronic Frontier Foundation, told TechCrunch.

“In some ways, this sounds like a variant in the microphone pen,” Galperin said. “But I think the normalization of the use of a registration device always, which in many cases would require the user to get the consent of everyone at a recording distance, eats with the expectation of privacy we have for our conversations in all sorts of spaces.”

There are Quite states in the US who make it illegal to record secret conversations without the consent of other persons. Ardayfio said he knows this, but it is up to their client to receive his consent before using the glasses.

“We trust our users to get their consent if they are in a two -part consent,” Ardayfio said, referring to the laws of a Dodetic American state that require the consent of all recorded parts.

“I would also worry about where the recorded data are maintained, how it is stored and who has access to it,” Galperin added.

Ardayfio said Halo is based Fluffy for audio transcription, which claims to never store registration. Nguyen claimed when the finished product was released to customers, it would be end -to -end encrypted, but gave no indication of how it would work. He also noted that Halo aims to comply with SOC 2, which means that it has been independently checked and proves sufficient protection of customer data. No date is provided for integrated SoC 2 compliance.

Still, the two students are not young in surgery-invasive controversial projects.

While still at Harvard last year, Ardayfio and Nguyen developed the i-XRAY, a demonstration project that added face recognition capabilities for smart Meta Ray-Ban glasses, proving how easily technology could be screwed into a device that was not intended to locate people.

The twin never released the code behind the i-xray but tested glasses in random passersby consent without consent. In a show video, Ardayfio showed the glasses that detect faces and pulling out personal information from strangers in a matter of seconds. The video included reactions of people who were glorified.

To one interview with 404 media, They recognized the dangers: “Some dude could just find a girl’s home address on the train and just follow them home,” Nguyen told Tech News.

For the time being, Halo X glasses have only one screen and a microphone, but no camera, though both explore the ability to add it to a future model.

Users still need to have their smartphones useful to help feed the glasses and get “real -time information, information and answers to” by nguyen questions. The glasses, which are made by another company that the startup did not name, are linked to a concomitant application on the owner’s phone, where the glasses essentially assign the calculation, since they do not have enough power to do it on the device itself.

Underneath the hood, smart glasses use Gemini and Google’s embarrassment as a chatbot engine, according to the two co -founders. Gemini is better for mathematics and reasoning, while using embarrassment to scratch the internet, they said.

During an interview, TechCrunch asked if their glasses knew when the next season “The Witcher” would come out. Responding in a way reminiscent of the C-3PO, Ardayfio said: “The Witcher era” will be released on Netflix in 2025, but there is still no exact date. Most sources expect the second half of 2025. “

“I don’t know if that’s right,” he added.


We always try to evolve and by providing some image of your perspective and feedback on TechCrunch and our coverage and events, you can help us! Complete this survey to let us know how we are doing and to get the chance to win a prize in return!

Artificial Intelligence (AI) conversation Dropouts face recognition glasses Harvard listening privacy recording smart smart glasses Start
Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
Previous ArticleY Combinator alum sre.ai increases $ 7.2 million for Devops AI agents
Next Article Google, sorry, but this pixel event was a cringefest
bhanuprakash.cg
techtost.com
  • Website

Related Posts

In major privacy victory, Supreme Court rules that geo-trafficking warrants are protected by privacy rights

29 June 2026

Govee’s smart nugget ice maker makes every frozen drink feel like luxury

28 June 2026

The Klue hack results in a data breach at several cybersecurity companies

26 June 2026
Add A Comment

Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

Don't Miss

Clicks shows off its BlackBerry-inspired phone in a new hands-on video

30 June 2026

Blue Origin still doesn’t know why its New Glenn rocket blew up last month

30 June 2026

Amazon launches new $1 billion FDE organization, following OpenAI and Anthropic

30 June 2026
Stay In Touch
  • Facebook
  • YouTube
  • TikTok
  • WhatsApp
  • Twitter
  • Instagram
Fintech

India’s payments chief believes artificial intelligence will play a big part in the next era of digital payments development

28 June 2026

Early Bird pricing ends tonight for the Founder Summit

26 June 2026

4 days left to save up to $190 on Founder Summit 2026

23 June 2026
Startups

Clicks shows off its BlackBerry-inspired phone in a new hands-on video

Omen AI’s plan to optimize data centers is all wet

Arena, the AI ​​leaderboard everyone uses, is now a $100 million business

© 2026 TechTost. All Rights Reserved
  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms and Conditions
  • Disclaimer

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.