Apple has warmed up for a long time, and the price is 3,499 US dollars (about 2 yuan.)50,000 yuan) will be available this FridayRecently, the famous Washington Post in the United States made a reminder on the privacy and security of this VR glasses.
According to the report, privacy researchers pointed out that Vision Pro can indeed bring a lot of new possibilities to our body's sensory expansionBut these devices are also recording data about the user's body movements and the surrounding environment, and the digital machine may be able to record anything we don't expect.
The American media is suspicious of Vision Pro's privacy infringementIt's not unfoundedBack in 2013, when Google Glass appeared, people had such concerns, such as the small screen and camera on the glasses. It is reported that according to the survey data of the market research company Toluna at that time, in the United States, which attaches great importance to privacy, 72% of the 1,000 respondents rejected Google Glass on the grounds of privacy.
The newspaper also noted: "Apple, which has a reputation for privacy, will not answer questions about how Vision Pro will solve these big questions." To date, it has also not allowed the Washington Post to independently test the hardware. ”
Privacy researchers have also pointed out that we have come to terms with the idea that smartphones could film us at any time. But the problem with the update is that the Vision Pro machines are still collecting information about the space around us, depicting the world around us that each of us lives in.
Adjunct professor at the University of Tampa, Meta Reality Lab (Meta'Joseph Jerome, head of sensor data policy at S Reality Labs, is very candid about the pitfalls:Knowing what's in the room around you can be more invasive than taking pictures.
For example, Vision Pro might measure the height of your house, or the size of your TV, and if you're in a wider space or use a larger TV, you'll have more purchasing power. WhileA device like the Vision Pro exposes one thing about something we can't change, and it also betrays something with a much higher amount of data: our bodies.
Researchers at the University of California at Berkeley found this finding last year:Based on data on head and hand movements only, they were able to uniquely and consistently identify about 55,000 different VR users, this information is just as useful as fingerprints, and perhaps even more so.
So do you have concerns when using Vision Pro?