Meta said it is updating second-generation Ray-Ban Meta AI glasses so the camera shuts off when the recording LED is tampered with or destroyed, aiming to deter covert capture. The company also emphasized that the LED and related protections are intended to build trust by giving nearby people clear signals. Separately, the report says Meta is testing a prototype that could raise additional privacy risks through “super-sensing” functionality—an area likely to intensify regulatory and institutional scrutiny. The policy debate includes prior litigation alleging that smart-glasses footage captured by users was later reviewed by workers to help train AI models. For universities, the development matters for campus technology governance: privacy-by-design expectations for emerging wearable and AI tools are likely to tighten, affecting procurement, research ethics approvals, and student and staff consent practices.