NoPeek - free open source Android app that detects nearby Meta Ray-Ban glasses and VR headsets via Bluetooth
from getnopeek@thelemmy.club to privacy@lemmy.ml on 26 May 01:44
https://thelemmy.club/post/49932992

Meta has sold 7M+ Ray-Ban glasses that look identical to normal glasses but can record you silently.

NoPeek detects them using immutable BLE manufacturer company IDs signals that cannot be randomized or hidden unlike MAC addresses.

Detects: Meta Ray-Ban, Snap Spectacles, Oakley Meta, TCL RayNeo, Meta Quest, Apple Vision Pro, Pico VR and more.

No ads. No tracking. No internet permission. Fully open source. MIT license.

github.com/getnopeek/nopeek-android

#privacy

threaded - newest

iturnedintoanewt@lemmy.world on 26 May 02:28 next collapse

… No releases?

SnotFlickerman@lemmy.blahaj.zone on 26 May 03:11 next collapse

You can build from source with Android Studio.

The link to the APK seemingly is broken so that leaves just building from source, which it has instructions for.

iturnedintoanewt@lemmy.world on 27 May 00:56 collapse

So… No releases.

umbrella@lemmy.ml on 26 May 03:45 collapse

yeah, having to compile apks for android is mad inconvenient and the developer really just has to do it once. honestly, beyond the bare minimum of compiling it, it should be easily found on fdroid.

SnotFlickerman@lemmy.blahaj.zone on 26 May 05:02 next collapse

I swear when I first saw this month or so ago there was an APK but I could be wrong.

My question is if it was there why did they take it down?

irotsoma@piefed.blahaj.zone on 26 May 06:11 next collapse

Yeah fdroid would be preferred over precompiled apks actually, since fdroid does the compiling to verify the compiled version doesn’t contain anything not in the code repo and reports stuff that may be unwanted that is in the repo.

Squizzy@lemmy.world on 26 May 07:36 collapse

Is this why obtainium has been returning no releases found!?

I thought obtainium was struggling with some aspect

bamboo@lemmy.blahaj.zone on 26 May 03:24 next collapse

why does this need to be a separate app? There are other Bluetooth apps which will notify you when it sees a device with a mac address and will record the signal strength and keep a record on a map. Just add a profile to those apps for the manufacturer mac prefix.

irotsoma@piefed.blahaj.zone on 26 May 06:16 collapse

Feel free to suggest similar apps that are privacy friendly (no spying ads, telemetry, or other unwanted “features") and quick overview of where to enable realtime alerts for specific mac prefixes in the app to mimic this functionality. I’d be interested.

bamboo@lemmy.blahaj.zone on 26 May 13:25 collapse

f-droid.org/en/packages/f.cking.software/

github.com/BLE-Research-Group/MetaRadar

irotsoma@piefed.blahaj.zone on 26 May 23:28 collapse

Thanks, but I couldn’t find a way to set alerts for a set of addresses like the OP app scans for, only for a specific MAC address. Wouldn’t be feasible to enter all possible addresses since that would be many millions of addresses for each manufacturer prefix.

bamboo@lemmy.blahaj.zone on 27 May 14:11 collapse

If you go to Radar Alerts, set the filter to use the manufacturer. The readme in OPs GitHub page lists these manufacturers: github.com/getnopeek/nopeek-android#️-devices-det…

irotsoma@piefed.blahaj.zone on 27 May 19:59 collapse

Yeah, unfortunately the By Manufacturer list is limited and doesn’t for example include the Meta glasses 0x0D53. So, still isn’t a feasible alternative unless more prefixes are added or the ability to add your own is added.

phoenixz@lemmy.ca on 26 May 03:44 next collapse

I would completely be fine with this app sending a hacking attempt in the direction of those glasses. If it can remotely brick those glasses, I’d be 100% fine with that. Hell, I’d install it myself

Fuck this garbage

magnue@lemmy.world on 26 May 04:41 next collapse

This needs to be taken on. I’d love an app that just notifies me whenever there’s one nearby. Maybe it could play the “I’ll be watching you” bit out of the police song.

BlackEco@lemmy.blackeco.com on 26 May 09:36 next collapse

How does it differ from Nearby Glasses, apart from detecting more AR headsets?

utopiah@lemmy.ml on 27 May 07:08 next collapse

Good question, seems newer but rely on the same mechanism.

BlackEco@lemmy.blackeco.com on 27 May 07:12 collapse

Someone else mentioned the less copyleft license (MIT vs. AGPL) as something to consider.

paris@lemmy.blahaj.zone on 27 May 18:54 collapse

It looks vibe coded to me. Shitload of emojis in the readme, only three commits where all of the code was added at once via file upload, account is two days old and named specifically for this project

MachineFab812@discuss.tchncs.de on 26 May 13:11 next collapse

Just a thought: politicians should not be allowed to use such apps. This right-to-privacy shit has gone too far, in the wrong direction, protecting ONLY the wrong people.

utopiah@lemmy.ml on 27 May 07:10 collapse

Fairness is pretty much a left-wing principle whereas excluding others from the inner group is a right-wring principle… so it makes sense.

MachineFab812@discuss.tchncs.de on 27 May 17:42 collapse

Up-skirt photos are the one area where this gets me caught-up; Either a hypocrite or a shitty person. For the sake of consistency, I tend towards shittiness - the only real reason there’s anything like an expectation of privacy in public is so shitty (powerful)people can get-away with shitty things, when really, being in-public is being on-display.

Then there’s my stance on getting “caught” having sex on a park bench in a secluded forest by way of a trail-cam. I’m far from convinced that video evidence should count as evidence of an otherwise truly private, victemless, “crime” that otherwise wouldn’t be. We should only be jailing public officials caught-out in conflicts of interest/corruption like-so, and almost never the camera-man.

Instead, its the opposite. We are surprisingly far into all of this deep-fake and leaked-video shit for the average person to have any qualms about saying “whether that video is real or not is none of your business”, as if significant resources will be spent validating all but the highest-profile of images, but I get there are people who are generally embarassed and not just wrapped-up in their personal “sin” of having been portrayed or caught in a compromising position.

None of it upsets me so much as former strippers or adult film stars losing their jobs over shit that’s years-behind them, while genuine pedos escape notice for decades. I’ll say it again: society and the law are laser-focused on the wrong shit, and from the wrong-end of the turd at that.

Etterra@discuss.online on 26 May 13:24 next collapse

But does it hit them with DDOS attacks?

utopiah@lemmy.ml on 27 May 07:06 next collapse

FWIW I think detecting VR with Meta Quest, Apple Vision Pro, Pico VR is quite funny. It’s like … hard NOT to detect such devices. You see a huge slab of plastic on the face of someone potentially looking in your direction and the cameras are numerous and visible.

So… for Meta Ray-Ban and Oakley Meta definitely because they are designed to look like traditional glasses and that’s IMHO very wrong. For others like Snap Spectacles or TCL RayNeo it’s quite obvious but still, OK makes sense.

Sadly as 404 media and others reported a lot of abuse came from wearing sneakingly such glasses then coercing people with the footage. I hope people who do abuse those tools do get prosecuted properly.

godsammitdam@lemmy.zip on 27 May 18:09 next collapse

Pretty good idea considering this:

cambridgeanalytica.org/…/dhs-ice-glasses-facial-r…

Americans, we live under fascist capitalism. We’ve got to adapt and push back.

luciferofastora@feddit.org on 27 May 20:24 collapse

What the fuck is that README and why does it stink of slop?

I’m not qualified to tell if the code is just as sloppy, but I’m not touching that.