The Complicated Ethics (and Laws) of Smart Glasses

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The nearly universal adoption of smartphones in the late 2000s changed more than how we waste time while waiting in lines. With nearly everyone carrying a high-quality camera and microphone in their pocket—and the ability to instantly broadcast anything to a potential audience of millions—our collective concept of privacy has been permanently altered. If you’re not a little concerned with how what you do in public would play on YouTube, you’re not paying attention. 

As smart glasses equipped with cameras and mics edge closer to mainstream adoption, we’re facing another, subtler shift. Unlike smartphones, where it’s obvious when someone is recording, smart glasses can capture video or audio nearly invisibly—raising fresh legal, ethical, and moral concerns. Here’s what you should be aware of, whether you’re currently rocking smart glasses or plan to in the future.

The legality of filming in public

What the general public thinks of as “privacy” may have shifted, but the law may not have kept pace. “Current laws do not provide the protection that most people would probably expect that they should,” says David B. Hoppe, an international transactional lawyer who specializes in emerging legal issues in media and technology.

Some statutes have been written to account for new technology—prohibitions on revenge porn, for instance—but the overarching legal framework concerning privacy was developed for a pre-smartphone, pre-smart glasses world. So let’s dig into it.

A primer on public photography

State and federal laws have criminalized some kinds of recordings in public, like shooting videos up people’s skirts, but in general, the First Amendment provides broad protection of people’s right to take photos and videos of whatever they can see. “In general, our presumption is that capturing photos, videos, or other data from public spaces is unrestricted,” says Eric Goldman, a professor at Santa Clara University School of Law and Co-Director of the High Tech Law Institute.

That presumption applies to smart glasses, so if you’re in a public space, you can usually record what you’d like. “As a general matter, the video function could be used in a public setting,” Hoppe says. 

How you use a recording matters, though. “An issue that could arise is whether or not there’s a commercial aspect to its use,” Hoppe says. “In many states there could be an obligation to have cleared the publicity rights from any individuals who are identifiable in the video.”

The meaning of “commercial,” though, can be tricky. Something like filming an advertisement would likely be considered commercial speech and have less legal protection, in terms of privacy, than something like making an art movie for your film class. Somewhere in the middle is earning money from a social media video. Monetizing doesn’t automatically remove legal free speech protection, but it could shift content toward commercial speech, and local filming laws could apply to what you shoot as well. It’s complicated, so if you have any doubts, talk to a lawyer.

Private businesses are a bit different, though

Courts have largely held that a patron in a private business that is open to the public, like a store or a restaurant, can expect more privacy than they have while on a public sidewalk, but less than they’d have if they were somewhere really private, like their home. “It gets into expectations of privacy,” explains Goldman. “A restaurant could be anywhere from family-seating, where that expectation would be unreasonable, to a private booth that has 50 feet in any direction from any other seat, which might be a more reasonable expectation of privacy.”

While a person can generally legally capture images in a business that’s open to the public, it’s within the owners’ rights to prohibit filming. “Normally businesses can set rules for how their customers engage with each other,” Goldman says. “The recourse would be banning you from their premises.”

So if you turn on your Ray-Ban Metas in the gym, you probably won’t be arrested, but the gym could/should have a “no photography” policy that it could enforce by having you banned from the premises and calling the cops if you won’t leave. Of course, recording in private areas of any business, like the locker room of said gym, is illegal everywhere in the U.S. 

Video vs. audio recording

Recording sound from a pair of smart glasses could expose you to legal risks that shooting video may not. While images taken in public of anything in plain view are generally legal, audio is a different story. Just like a conversation in a restaurant, the key factor is the “reasonable expectation of privacy.” Two people having a quiet conversation on a park bench likely expect a level of privacy that a guy shouting on a street corner does not.

Courts have largely agreed that recording conversations in public is protected by the Constitution, as long as everyone in the conversation knows they are being recorded and agrees to it. The opposite situation—a third party recording a private conversation without the participants’ knowledge—would often be considered “eavesdropping,” and that’s often a crime. 

It gets tricky when only one party consents to a recording. “In general, there are some states that have required that any recording of a conversation between two parties requires the consent of both parties,” Goldman says. “So if the glasses are being used in those conversations, without consent from the other party, that would be a violation in those states.”

Here’s a breakdown of one-party consent states and all-party consent states. If you have any doubts about the legality of a recording, consult with a lawyer, or just don’t hit record.

The other side of the coin: what about the users’ privacy?

Maybe you bought a pair of smart glasses to record your life, but make no mistake: you are the one being recorded. When you click “agree” on that terms of service screen, you could be allowing a big data company to collect your GPS data, biometric data (like eye movements and health information), contact lists, messages, political views, what you see, what you say, who you talk to, and more. And it’s legal because you agreed to it. Usually.

“Some [data collected by your smart glasses] is controlled by contract,” Goldman says. “So Meta would disclose its privacy policies in some disclosure to the consumer, and then those might be the rules that apply. There are some places where there may be limits on the ability of Meta to access that data,” Goldman says.

Bottom line: you have some protections over your personal data that aren’t necessarily signed away with a click. A patchwork of federal laws provide specific protections: HIPAA protects the privacy of your medical records, FCRA protects your credit reports, and other federal laws protect financial information children’s privacy. But more meaningful consumer privacy protection comes from California state law. In the last 10 years, Cali has enacted relatively robust privacy protection laws that give Californians the right to know what personal data companies collect, the right to delete that data, and the right to opt out of their data being sold.

“But I live in Ohio,” you might be saying. First, sorry about that. Secondly, we have your back anyway! Big tech companies have largely adopted California’s privacy laws as their baseline for data collection. So while the amount of data being collected from your glasses isn’t ideal, at least you can claw some of it back.

Exciting new frontiers in privacy invasion

Check out this video of a recent concert from O.G. trip hop band Massive Attack:

The band is turning facial recognition technology on its audience, displaying audience members along with what seems to be their professions. The technology to instantly identify a stranger and scrape publicly available databases on that person is possible with existing technology in smart glasses, and is, in theory, perfectly legal. Even if the person being filmed doesn’t know you’re doing it. Again, how you use information you collect might not be legal.

According to Hoppe, the laws in place just weren’t written with smart glasses in mind. “The basic standard, that comes from common law times, was that if you’re in a public place, you don’t have a reasonable expectation of privacy, but at that point in time—and up until the last two decades—being in a public place meant you could be observed, but that you would simply be a memory in a human mind somewhere. It wouldn’t be recorded in video format that could immediately be published to the entire world.” Hoppe said. 

Where does the law go from here?

Right now, privacy laws in the U.S. are largely reactive and evolve after new technology has reshaped how we live. But what might it look like if we got ahead of the curve (or at least tried harder to catch up?) Like everything, it’s complicated.

Hoppe imagines one extreme: a “privacy maximalist” set of laws, where no one could be recorded without their consent, even in public. “That would make sense, right? But the challenge you then have is things like security cameras and other stationary devices that are simply recording everything. Is that really a privacy threat?” Hoppe says. “And if so, isn’t it outweighed by the beneficial effects to society as as a whole, in terms of protection of crime prevention and protection of property and so forth?”

And there’s that whole “freedom” thing. “The idea that there is a public sphere where we are free to capture and record and share our views about what we see, is an essential part of free speech,” Goldman says. “And if privacy laws were to overly restrict that, it would take our away our ability not only to express ourselves and and react to the world that we see, but it would have significant power implications on the ability of people to control conversations in a way that would ultimately take power away from us as people…We cannot let the concerns about people’s desire to control what people know about them override the ability of people to have organic, healthy, pro-social conversations.”

The social norms of smart glasses recording

If you’re living your life in a halfway ethical manner (and you’re not providing cultural commentary in concert form like Massive Attack) you probably aren’t keen to privately dox everyone on the bus, and social norms are probably more important to you than potential legal penalties. Maybe you won’t be hauled away in cuffs for recording people eating dinner on the outdoor patio of a restaurant, but you will be met with scorn from just about every diner—especially if you’re sticking a phone in their face. Smart glasses, being less obvious than iPhones, change the equation somewhat. The etiquette around their use is evolving, leaving us all in a gray area where what’s legal and what’s socially acceptable don’t always line up.

Even if they’re not encoded in law, we’ve (mostly) collectively agreed upon some norms when it comes to cell phones—don’t film others in the gym, don’t stick your phone in a stranger’s face, etc.—and we’re getting there with smart glasses, but until we arrive, it’s going to be a bit tricky. 

Smart glasses make recording less obtrusive and more natural-feeling, but they also make it easier to cross lines without realizing it. So it’s best to err on the side of courtesy: respect people in public, respect private spaces, and be cautious of what you’re recording in private/public spaces—taking pictures of your meal and friends is cool; taking pictures of strangers is not. Getting it wrong probably won’t end up with being thrown into jail, but being known as “that creep with the damn Meta glasses” might ultimately be a worse fate.

In Kansas City, Secretary Rollins Speaks on State of Farm Economy, Announces Suite of Actions to Support American Farmers

(Kansas City, MO, September 25, 2025) – Today, in Kansas City at the Agriculture Outlook Forum, U.S. Secretary of Agriculture Brooke L. Rollins spoke on the current state of the farm economy in the United States and addressed the ways President Trump is supporting American agriculture. U.S. farm production inputs are significantly more costly than four years ago, putting pressure on farmers’ bottom line.

Try This Setting to Improve Your Battery Life in iOS 26

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I’d be willing to bet the one thing most of us want from our iPhones is quite simple: more battery life. Apple can keep adding new features and designs with each new smartphone iteration, but if the company just announced a new iPhone with record-breaking battery life, customers would be thrilled.

While we may have to wait for a time when the iPhone can go a couple days in between charges, Apple has added a new option to iOS 26 in an effort to help extend your iPhone’s battery life. The feature, Adaptive Power, uses on-device AI to analyze your iPhone usage and guess the times you’ll need additional battery life. This is exactly how I want to see AI being used—not for generating hyper-realistic videos or musical slop.

How Adaptive Power tries to boost your battery

When Adaptive Power decides it’s time to engage, the feature can adjust your iPhone’s performance level. This will make some tasks take longer than they normally would, but that slower speed supposedly saves on battery life. In addition, Adaptive Power lowers screen brightness by 3%, limits background activity, and, when your iPhone reaches 20%, kicks on Low Power Mode without asking you first.

Apple isn’t totally clear here about the difference between Low Power Mode and Adaptive Power in general. From what we know, it seems that Adaptive Power simply reduces processing speeds at select intervals, and only slightly lowers brightness, while Low Power Mode slows speeds and display refresh rate, and limits brightness, 5G, iCloud syncing, and mail fetch, among other tasks.

Adaptive Power is enabled by default on Apple’s newest iPhones, including the iPhone 17, iPhone 17 Pro, iPhone 17 Pro Max, and iPhone Air—the latter of which could most likely benefit from such a feature. For all other compatible iPhones, which includes iPhone 15 Pro and newer, the feature is turned off by default. That means, unless you have an iPhone 17 device, you’ll need to turn this on yourself.

How to turn Adaptive Power on or off

Whether you have an iPhone 15 Pro or an iPhone 17, you’ll find the controls for Adaptive Power in the same place. Open Settings, then head to Battery > Power Mode. Here, you can tap the toggle next to “Adaptive Power” to turn the setting on or off.

Since Adaptive Power turns on and off throughout the day, Apple also offers you the option to receive alerts whenever the feature is active. You can adjust this setting from the “Adaptive Power Notifications” toggle.

I’ve been using Adaptive Power since iOS 26 dropped on Sept. 15, but it’s tough to say whether the feature has had a noticeable impact on my battery life. I think it would help if Apple added Adaptive Power information to my battery stats, so I could compare the impacts before and after using the feature. For now, I’ll continue using it, if for no other reason than to offer my battery the best possible chance of making it through the day without its charger.

The Mac’s Preview App Is Finally Available on iPhone

Your iPhone is essentially a computer that fits in your pocket, so it only makes sense for Apple to treat it as such. To that point, with iOS 26, both the iPhone and the iPad get a new app that was a Mac exclusive for over 20 years: Preview.

What can you do with the Preview app?

Like on macOS, the Preview app for iOS and iPadOS is largely made for viewing PDFs and other documents. When you first open the app, you’ll see the options to either create a new document or scan one with your iPhone’s camera.

Most of the time, however, you probably you have an existing document you want to open using Preview. If so, you’ll find those options in the bottom half of this starting page. This is Preview’s integration with the Files app: You can browse your documents from Files and open any with Preview.

Once you have a document loaded up, you’re able to view, annotate, markup, and edit it. If you need to fill out a document with your information, you can use AutoFill to automatically enter contact info and other saved details. You can add your signature, and if you’re on your iPad, you can use your Apple Pencil to draw on the document. Otherwise, you can use your finger to mark up the file.

You can also export documents from the Preview app. You can work with file types including HEIDC, JPEG, PDF, PNG, and TIFF. And as with Preview on macOS, there are a number of controls when exporting, such as resolution, embedding text, and saving images as JPEG.

While there’s a lot you can do here, the biggest strength I see for this mobile Preview app is using it as a tool for legal documents. If you need to sign an important document, you can quickly scan it into the app, add your signature, fill out any information—perhaps automatically with AutoFill—then email the doc out, all without needing to jump to your computer.

Preview on iOS is still a work in progress

If you look at Preview’s App Store page, you’ll notice some mixed reviews. After using the app for a bit, I understand why. Preview for iOS is definitely still a work in progress and in need of some key upgrades.

The biggest quirks I noticed immediately: The main menu page is cluttered, with the Files integration looking more like a glitch than a dedicated window. Speaking of Files, Apple made the decision to have documents in Files open in Preview. At first, that sounds like a good idea, until you experience it in person on both iOS and iPadOS. Being dragged out of the Files app when you’re not expecting it is jarring, especially when you’re used to viewing your docs directly in the app.

The workaround here is to avoid Files for opening, well, files. Use the Files integration within Preview, so you stay in the same app. How intuitive. You could also choose to delete the Preview app, but that’s a bit of a shame when it’s such a major update for iOS and iPadOS 26.

Also, when you choose the Markup option, there’s no clear way to exit without closing the whole app first. As far as I can tell, the only way to do so is to tap the three-dots in the top right, then tap Markup to exit this menu. The Markup button should really stay on screen as it does on macOS, so it’s obvious how to dismiss it.

These Beats Studio Buds Are Under $80 Right Now

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The original Beats Studio Buds may not be the brand’s latest or most advanced earbuds, but they are still a crowdpleaser—and a more budget-friendly alternative to newer generations. Currently, they’re an even better buy on Amazon, as they’re 47% off, their lowest price ever according to price tracking tools

These buds offer decent active noise cancellation (although unlike pricier alternatives, they only use a fixed filter rather than adaptive ANC), easy-to-use on-ear controls, punchy bass, and balanced and crisp highs—strong performance at an $80 price point.

The earbuds also feature iOS integration and one-touch pairing with both Android and iOS. Most users find the fit comfortable, although this PCMag review notes that since they are on the smaller side and have a slick surface, they can be a little tricky to place in your ears. However, once they’re in, they remain secure, and the inclusion of three different eartip sizes lets you customize the experience. 

They carry an IPX4 water-resistance rating, so while they can’t be submerged or held under running water, they can withstand light rain and sweat. The battery life is decent—up to five hours when noise cancellation is on, and eight hours when it’s off, plus up to an extra 16 hours from the charging case.

If you don’t need high-end noise cancellation but still want a pair of reliable earbuds that deliver major bass, decent ANC, and a price point well under $100 price point, the Beats Studio Buds offer a great blend of quality and affordability. 

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You Can Set Price Alerts for Prime Day so You Don’t Go Over Budget

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The fall version of Amazon’s Prime Day is approaching fast. Prime “Big Deal Days” will take place from Oct. 7-8., and we’ll keep you updated with all the best deals leading up to and all throughout the sale. But before you purchase anything, here’s how to set your own prices for Prime Day and every other day.

If you’re an impulse buyer, you know that shopping events like Prime Day can be bad. Even though we know Amazon is using all kinds of manipulation techniques to get us to buy things we don’t need, it still works, so this year, try setting your own prices and only choosing things you already want to buy.

How to “set your own prices” on Amazon

You can’t make Amazon lower its prices at your whim, but you can set up an alert system to let you know if anything you want to buy dips in price enough for it to make sense for you to purchase it. Below is a step-by-step guide to setting your own personal maximum price for any item sold by Amazon:

  • Identify the items you’d like to purchase and throw them into your Amazon wishlist. Make sure your wishlist is set to “public.”

  • Visit the Amazon price-tracking website CamelCamelCamel and make a free account. There are other price-tracking apps and websites that, more or less, do the same thing—Slick Deals, Honey, Keepa, etc.—so check out this overview of the best price-tracking tools if you want to compare them. Spoiler alert, though: CamelCamelCamel wins.

  • Click “import wishlist.” (You’ll have to copy and paste the URL from your Amazon wishlist.)

  • Once you’ve done that, CamelCamelCamel lets you add specific maximum prices (or percentage drops) for everything in your wishlist. Enter the maximum amount you’re willing to pay for each item in your list, and then you can tell it to send you an email when any item’s price drops to your set spending limit.

  • Ignore all the Prime Days hype and wait for the email alert letting you know that your chosen items have become cheap enough for you to buy.

  • Spend Prime Day feeling smug and agree with yourself that you actually are the smartest person alive. Don’t even look at Amazon’s website. Seriously. Well, maybe just for a second. This time you’ll have the willpower to avoid buying another chocolate fountain or a self-stirring mug with “SELF STIRRING MUG” written on the side, right? Right?

More ideas for imposing limits on your spending

If you want to take tech-based shopping guardrails beyond the basic “time to buy” alert system described above, here are some ideas.

  • Block ads: If you’re the type of person who responds to online ads, you can block a ton of them with a simple tool or app. Here’s our overview of the best ad-blocking software.

  • Track your expenses: Whether you do it with pencil and paper or use an app, seeing how much you’re spending can be a powerful motivation to be more thrifty. Budgeting over time can even give you a bit of a surplus, so you can splurge when Prime Day rolls around if you want to.

  • Save up for something: Saving up for something in the future—a vacation, an electric surfboard, whatever—can make it easier to resist spending now.

  • Hit your internal pause button: If you can make a habit of waiting a day or two between thinking “I want those sunglasses” and entering your credit card numbers, you may decide your old sunglasses are just fine.

  • Set up a one-in-one-out system: For everything you buy or acquire, get rid of a similar item (or more!) to make room for it. Knowing something has to go if you hit “buy now” can stop you from making an impulse buy, and following this rule keeps your home less cluttered. Bonus points if you resell an item before getting a similar one. Make money before spending money, and save space while you’re at it.

  • Consider professional help: It’s normal and common to sometimes have a little difficulty controlling spending, but researchers say about 6% of Americans suffer from compulsive buying disorder which may be part of a larger psychological problem. So if your spending is driving you deep into debt, you’re suffering real-world consequences based on your buying habits, or you just feel like shopping might be a problem for you, talk to a professional.


Looking for something else? Competing retailers like Walmart, Best Buy, and Target have Prime Day competition sales that are especially useful if you don’t have Amazon Prime.

I Just Got the Polar Loop Fitness Strap, and It Looks Great so Far

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The market for fitness bands competing with Whoop is beginning to fill out, and the latest one I’ve gotten my hands on is the Polar Loop. (I recently reviewed Amazfit’s Helio Strap and Garmin’s screenless tracker, which turned out to be a sleep-only specialty device.) 

My full review of the Polar Loop will have to wait until I have more data, but right away I noticed some significant physical differences between the Polar Loop and its competitors.

Below is a size comparison of the Whoop MG (left), the Polar Loop (center), and the Amazfit Helio Strap (right). The three devices are lined up in declining order of both price and size: the Whoop is the smallest and costs anywhere from $199/year to $359/year depending on which tier of membership you choose. The Polar Loop is $199.99 as a one-time purchase with no subscription, and the Amazfit Helio Strap is $99.99, also with no subscription. 

Sensor sides of the Whoop MG, Polar Loop, and Amazfit HelioStrap
Left to right: Whoop MG, Polar Loop, Amazfit Helio Strap
Credit: Beth Skwarecki

I’m not sure if the Loop will be able to justify being double the price of the Helio, at least on functionality (but we’ll see how I feel after I put it through its paces). In its defense, though, I will say it seems that the Polar team put a little more effort into styling than Amazfit did, and in one respect perhaps a bit more than Whoop. The Whoop device only comes in black, although you can cover it with bands of any color. The Polar Loop, meanwhile, comes in black if you buy it with a black or brown strap, and in a pale grayish color if you buy it with the greige strap. 

Polar Loop with strap pulled up, showing gold finish underneath

Credit: Beth Skwarecki

The shiny accent under the band is a nice touch. Like both the Whoop and the Helio, the Polar Loop covers its device with a fabric strap. Its design looks simpler to replicate, though: just thread a 21-millimeter strap through the slots and you have a Polar Loop strap. 

Meanwhile, the Whoop has its own unique shape of band and clasp (and the current 5.0/MG Whoop takes a different band than the 4.0 generation). The Helio can take any 22-millimeter watch strap, but only if you’re OK with the blank plastic face of the device showing. The third-party strap market looks more promising to me for the Loop than for its competitors. And while Polar probably doesn’t love to think about it that way, I consider plentiful, affordable strap selection to be a plus for any wearable.

Spotify Is Finally Trying to Combat AI Slop

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On a post on its blog this morning, Spotify announced it is doing something to combat the glut of AI-generated music on its streaming platform. According to the company, bad actors and content farms that “push ‘slop’ into the ecosystem” are going to be dealt with. Spotify says it has already removed over 75 million such tracks in the last year, and bigger changes are coming.

Over the next few months, Spotify says it will crack down on musical impersonators, implement a new spam filtering system, and work with others in the music business to develop an industry standard for AI disclosures in music credits.

How Spotify’s AI music policy will work

According to Spotify, the availability of AI tools has allowed the easy creation of musical deepfakes—AI impersonations of existing artists, in other words. The company says it will remove tracks that “impersonates another artist’s voice without their permission—whether that’s using AI voice cloning or any other method.”

The ban includes both tracks for which the person uploading is explicitly presenting themselves as another artist and tracks labeled as an “AI version” of another artist—unless the track was made with the original artist’s permission, of course.

Spotify is also targeting mass uploads, duplicates, SEO hacks, artificially short track abuse, and other spammy abuses of its platform. The company’s new spam filter will be rolled out this fall and will identify uploaders and tracks engaging in these tactics, then “tag them and stop recommending them.” The end goal, according to Spotify, is to prevent bad actors from generating royalties that could be otherwise paid out to professional artists and songwriters.

Spotify’s working on an AI music labeling standard

Spotify has also pledged to help develop an overarching industry standard for disclosure of how artificial intelligence is used in the production of music. Labeling AI in music credits is a much more complex issue than Spotify’s other new initiatives: all kinds of technology are used in music production, and there’s a huge continuum between a track that’s generated entirely from a prompt and using auto-tune on a slightly off-pitch vocal.

Spotify says the effort requires “broad industry alignment” so it’s working with companies like Labelcamp, NueMeta, Revelator, and SonoSuite through music industry standardization company DDEX to develop an industry standard for AI labeling.

There’s still more to be done, though

Spotify’s new initiatives don’t ban AI music, or require it to be labeled. The company says it wants to treat all music “equally, regardless of the tools used to make it,” which seems to leave space for Spotify to continue promoting obviously AI-generated music playlists like “Jazz for Study” and “Lo Fi Chill” that consist mainly of “artists” like The Midtown Players, ourchase, and The Tate Jackson Trio that have all the signs of being AI-creations, but are officially “verified” by Spotify.

To be fair to the music streaming service, I did a similar search for AI playlists and musicians a few months ago, and it’s marginally more difficult to find now than it was then, but until Spotify stops filling its own playlists with AI-generated glurge, its pledge to fight “AI slop” rings hollow.

Your iPhone’s Camera Comes With a Hidden Translator

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I recently took a trip to Europe, hopping across a few countries that all spoke languages I didn’t understand. As such, in order to interpret menus, signs, and packaging, I needed to translate the text back into English. While you might assume you need to use a specific translator app of choice to get this done, you really only need one thing: your iPhone’s camera.

I, along with all of the people I traveled with, have an iPhone, so I assumed all of us knew about this trick. To my surprise, however, nobody in my party knew about this. So, I’m here to make sure your next international trip is a bit easier.

Translate text with your iPhone’s camera

The next time you need to translate some text in front of you, instead of heading for Google Translate, Microsoft Translator, or even Apple’s own Translate app, just open your Camera app. Frame up the text in the middle of the viewfinder and give your iPhone a moment to “think.” If all goes well, you should see a yellow frame appear around the text, and a new button appear in the bottom right of the viewfinder—or top right, if you’re holding your iPhone in landscape.

Tap this button, and iOS will cut out the selected text, and zoom in to bring it into focus. Now, tap the “Translate” button that appears in the bottom left (or top left in landscape), wait a moment, and presto: The text is replaced by your target language. As you might guess, for me, that’s English, but the feature will translate into whichever system language your iPhone is currently set to.

translating within the camera app

Credit: Lifehacker

For many applications, this translation is enough. But there’s more you can do with this. If you need to share that translated text somewhere, you can tap the translation to pull up a Translate mini window. Here, you can copy the translation so you can paste it wherever you’d like. You’ll also be able to have iOS read either the translation or original text out loud, add the translation to your favorites, or open the translation in the Translate app.

This hidden perk is part of the iPhone’s larger Live Text feature, which uses OCR (optical character recognition) to identify text in images. Live Text allows you to select text both in images and within the camera’s viewfinder for easy copy and pasting. And, since iOS 16, it allows you to translate that text directly within the camera as well. Since it’s powered by the Translate app, it supports the languages the app does, which includes:

  • Arabic

  • Chinese (Mandarin, Simplified)

  • Chinese (Mandarin, Traditional)

  • Dutch

  • English (UK)

  • French

  • German

  • Hindi

  • Indonesian

  • Italian

  • Japanese

  • Korean

  • Polish

  • Portuguese (Brazil)

  • Russian

  • Spanish (Spain)

  • Thai

  • Turkish

  • Ukrainian

  • Vietnamese

If this feature isn’t working for you, it’s likely not turned on. To check, head to Settings > Camera, then ensure “Show Detected Text” is enabled.

Other ways to translate on iPhone

This is far from the only way to translate other languages on your iPhone. As previously mentioned, iOS comes with a built-in Translate app, which has its own Camera function as well. But with iOS 26, there’s a new translation feature that works seamlessly as you use your iPhone: Live Translate.

As the name suggests, Live Translate can translate conversations in real time. This works in Messages with text, but also during FaceTime and phone calls when talking to someone in another language. If you have a compatible pair of AirPods, you can even use this feature when talking to someone in person: You’ll hear their words translated in your ears, and they’ll see your words translated on your iPhone’s display.