Tim Paradis
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Podcast Appearances
Yeah, it's hard for me to understand that too.
I think what it can do is it can likely record...
record and transcribe conversations that are happening.
You can have a playback mode where you can go back and replay events.
Maybe you can imagine a scenario where you're a senior and you have a hard time dealing with medical appointments.
Many of us have a hard time going to the doctor by ourselves and trying to remember what was said and what you should do.
If you're wearing a pair of smart glasses, maybe that whole thing could be recorded on video, so you're not holding up your phone, and then you can go home and you can play it back and you can share it with your family.
But that's the problem, is the sharing fees, because in many jurisdictions, there's not really laws that are well-designed to deal with this.
You're allowed to record for personal reasons, but depending on the jurisdiction...
You may or may not be allowed to share it and definitely not to social media because you're going to make money off of that.
So it's really messy and complicated right now.
But that could be one case where you go to the doctor and you wear your smart glasses, right?
You have a hard time.
Or if maybe you're somebody that has some sort of disability, maybe that would help you in that scenario as well.
Yeah, and I think three, four years ago, I was a big proponent of not letting that technology into Canada because I was concerned about the surveillance piece.
But to your point now, we just talked about the smart glasses.
There are cameras everywhere.
And I think we have to be like almost post-camera.
We have to assume that, you know, anything could be recording us at any time of the day and that nothing's private.
And so we have to create these environments where we don't let the cameras in.