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Detector to keep you off Google Glass radar

Darpan News Desk IANS, 04 Jun, 2014 01:16 PM
    Amid news that bars in San Francisco and Seattle in the US have already banned wearers of Google Glass, a wearable computer that allows users to take photos and record videos, a Berlin-based artist has come up with a detector that can help you create your own "glasshole-free zone".
     
    "To say ‘I do not want to be filmed’ at a restaurant, at a party, or playing with your kids is perfectly OK. But how do you do that when you do not even know if a device is recording?" Julian Oliver, who designed the gadget, was quoted as saying.
     
    Oliver wrote a simple programme called Glasshole.sh that detects any Glass device attempting to connect to a Wi-Fi network based on a unique character string that, he said, he found in the MAC addresses of Google's wearable computers.
     
    A MAC address is a hardware address that uniquely identifies each node on a network.
     
    This is how it works.
     
    Install the programme on a Raspberry Pi or Beaglebone mini-computer and plug it into a USB network antenna.
     
    The gadget becomes a Google Glass detector, sniffing the local network for signs of Glass users.
     
    When it detects Glass, it uses the programme “Aircrack-NG” to impersonate the network and send a “deauthorisation” command, cutting the headset’s Wi-Fi connection.
     
    It can also emit a beep to signal the Glass-wearer’s presence to anyone nearby, said a report in wired.com.

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