Meta will run a commercial in Super Bowl LIX promoting its Ray-Ban Meta Glasses, and use actors Chris Hemsworth and Chris Pratt to capture attention ...
New sporty model. In addition to the two models mentioned above, Meta is reportedly working on the third new smart glasses ...
New Orleans Police on Friday released body-camera footage, showing the moment they exchanged gunfire with the man behind the ...
The man who drove a truck into a crowd of people in New Orleans on New Year’s Day, killing 14, had previously scouted the French Quarter and recorded video with his Meta smart glasses, the FBI said.
MORE: New Orleans truck attack suspect: What we know about Shamsud-Din Jabbar The company introduced the Meta Ray-Ban smart glasses in 2021 along with a companion app allowing users to upload ...
Readily available smart technology was used by the domestic terrorist who pulled off a deadly New Year’s Day attack in the French Quarter, according to the FBI. Security experts say it was an example ...
The FBI appears to have requested travel records on Jabbar the day before he killed 14 people in New Orleans, according to ...
The man behind the January 1 New Orleans attack recorded his actions with Meta smart glasses, the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) has revealed. Ray-Ban Meta Glasses could soon benefit from a ...
Shamsud-Din Jabbar, responsible for the New Year’s Day truck attack in New Orleans, visited the city twice before, recording video of the French Quarter with Meta smart glasses to plan the assault. He ...
The man responsible for the deadly truck attack in New Orleans on New Year’s Day visited the city twice before and recorded video of the French Quarter with Meta smart glasses.
The glasses, created by Meta, permits hands-free recording, allowing the new Orleans attacker to capture footage without drawing attention.
The man who rammed a pickup truck into revelers on New Orleans’ Bourbon Street on New Year’s Day wore Meta smart glasses when planning and conducting the attack, the FBI said Sunday. While there’s no ...