New Facebook glasses mean you never have to see a real person again
New
augmented reality glasses developed by Facebook will immediately
transform anyone you see into their Facebook page, thus removing the
need for any actual social contact.
‘These glasses are an important step towards my ultimate ambition,’
said Facebook creator Mark Zuckerberg, ‘the complete destruction of
normal human relations.’
The new ‘avoidant reality’ glasses feature an in-built facial
recognition system that automatically identifies ‘real people’ and
superimposes an image of their Facebook page onto the wearer’s lens.
However, when faced with someone who is not on Facebook, the glasses
emit a high pitch alarm and immediately black out the lenses in order to
save the user from ‘unprotected social contact’.
‘These glasses mean that people will now be able to see everything
that matters about a person at a glance,’ explained Zuckberberg, ‘their
likes, dislikes, friends and relationship status, plus favourite brand
of cola and maize-based snack. This liberates Facebook users from the
tedious task of actually talking to people, allowing them to focus on
much more important activities such as updating their own status.’
Following Facebook’s recent purchase of photo sharing app Instagram,
the new glasses mean that the company now has monopoly control over not
just every photograph ever taken, but also every retinal image and
visual memory.
‘These glasses give people the chance to share everything they see
with all their friends,’ said Zuckerberg, ‘but we have also included
important privacy settings so that people can restrict full access to
their life to just an intimate circle of their closest companions,
marketing companies and advertisers.’
Critics claim that the Facebook glasses represent a move towards a
sinister new surveillance society in which everyone ends up surveilling
themselves. ‘I fail to see what is so sinister about that,’ said
Zuckerberg. ‘All we are trying to do is own and control reality. Is that
really so bad?’
Facebook have denied suggestions that people wearing the new glasses
would immediately surrender the rights to everything they ever see.
‘That is a ridiculous allegation,’ said a faceless Facebook lawyer. ‘We
have owned the copyright to everyone’s life for years. If you check the
user agreement, people signed away those rights at exactly the same time
as they signed away their soul.’
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