Google have patented a “wearable
computing device” that will allow them to record, categorise and store people’s
lives.
Google hope to be able to record a
persons day-to-day life and store the footage in a central searchable database.
Using technology similar to Google
Glass, users would permanently wear a discreet recording device, and Google
would then upload and index the footage to a database.
Express.co.uk reports:
The patent explains that the online
database of footage would be searchable, allowing the user to ask questions
like “Who were the people at the business lunch this afternoon?”, or “How many
books did I read in May?”.
Google also details how its slightly
creepy database could be shared with multiple users.
This would allow people to query
friends’ or families’ video database with questions such as “What did my
friends do last night?”, “where was my sister on Friday?”.
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Although the technology could be
invaluable for some people, for example those suffering with Alzheimer’s
disease, it does carry a number of privacy concerns.
With the recent hacking of Ashley
Madison – potentially exposing the adulterous fantasies of some 37 million
people across the globe – Google may struggle to convince people to upload
point-of-view footage of their every waking moment.
Its also important to remember that
patents do not always indicate what a firm is working on, but simply shows a certain
level of interest.
However with Google adamant that its
Glass program is not dead, it is easy to see how this technology could be
implemented in a next-generation product.
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