Taylor Lorenz’s Power User

The Fashion Industry's Surveillance Problem w/ Amy Odell

43 min · 8. heinä 2026
jakson The Fashion Industry's Surveillance Problem w/ Amy Odell kansikuva

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Are we living through the dawn of a permanent Surveillance Summer? SUPPORT MY WORK:  Buy a paid subscription to my newsletter at usermag.co [http://usermag.co]            Support my work on Patreon: http://patreon.com/taylorlorenz [http://patreon.com/taylorlorenz]      Kylie Jenner is the new face of Meta's AI smart glasses and suddenly, mass surveillance is a fashion trend. Influencers are declaring a "hot surveillance summer," West Village fashion girlies are posting AI glasses selfies, and for thousands of people (not me! lol), cameras on your face have officially gone from creepy to chic. How did we get here?    In this episode, I sit down with iconic fashion journalist Amy Odell, author of the Back Row newsletter covering fashion, culture, and power, to unpack how Big Tech used the fashion industry to normalize wearable surveillance. We trace the full history of smart glasses, from the Google Glass disaster and Snapchat Spectacles vending machines to Ray-Ban Stories, Oakley Meta glasses, and the rhinestone-studded AI glasses taking over your feed.   We discuss why the Kylie AI glasses are a turning point for wearable tech, and how this could be the moment personalized AI surveillance becomes permanently woven into public life.  Subscribe to Amy's newsletter here: https://www.backrow.net/ [https://www.backrow.net/]    We get into: ▸ Why Meta chose Kylie Jenner as the face of its AI glasses campaign ▸ How Mark Zuckerberg rehabbed his image through influencer interviews ▸ The "hot surveillance summer" discourse and why some women are embracing being recorded ▸ How fashion makes surveillance tech palatable — from GoPro to AI hair clips ▸ Meta's facial recognition plans, data harvesting, and what it means for privacy ▸ The Meta Gala, OpenAI's fashion world infiltration, and Snap's $2,000 AR flop ▸ How anti-phone and anti-screen sentiment is fueling the rise of ambient computing, AI pendants, pins, and camera-equipped AirPods  ▸ Who actually owns the data Meta's AI glasses collect

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jakson The Fashion Industry's Surveillance Problem w/ Amy Odell kansikuva

The Fashion Industry's Surveillance Problem w/ Amy Odell

Are we living through the dawn of a permanent Surveillance Summer? SUPPORT MY WORK:  Buy a paid subscription to my newsletter at usermag.co [http://usermag.co]            Support my work on Patreon: http://patreon.com/taylorlorenz [http://patreon.com/taylorlorenz]      Kylie Jenner is the new face of Meta's AI smart glasses and suddenly, mass surveillance is a fashion trend. Influencers are declaring a "hot surveillance summer," West Village fashion girlies are posting AI glasses selfies, and for thousands of people (not me! lol), cameras on your face have officially gone from creepy to chic. How did we get here?    In this episode, I sit down with iconic fashion journalist Amy Odell, author of the Back Row newsletter covering fashion, culture, and power, to unpack how Big Tech used the fashion industry to normalize wearable surveillance. We trace the full history of smart glasses, from the Google Glass disaster and Snapchat Spectacles vending machines to Ray-Ban Stories, Oakley Meta glasses, and the rhinestone-studded AI glasses taking over your feed.   We discuss why the Kylie AI glasses are a turning point for wearable tech, and how this could be the moment personalized AI surveillance becomes permanently woven into public life.  Subscribe to Amy's newsletter here: https://www.backrow.net/ [https://www.backrow.net/]    We get into: ▸ Why Meta chose Kylie Jenner as the face of its AI glasses campaign ▸ How Mark Zuckerberg rehabbed his image through influencer interviews ▸ The "hot surveillance summer" discourse and why some women are embracing being recorded ▸ How fashion makes surveillance tech palatable — from GoPro to AI hair clips ▸ Meta's facial recognition plans, data harvesting, and what it means for privacy ▸ The Meta Gala, OpenAI's fashion world infiltration, and Snap's $2,000 AR flop ▸ How anti-phone and anti-screen sentiment is fueling the rise of ambient computing, AI pendants, pins, and camera-equipped AirPods  ▸ Who actually owns the data Meta's AI glasses collect

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jakson Bars Are Secretly Scanning Your Face And Tracking You kansikuva

Bars Are Secretly Scanning Your Face And Tracking You

Most people hand their ID to a bouncer without thinking twice. But what if your local bar was monitoring way more than your age? SUPPORT MY WORK:  Buy a paid subscription to my newsletter at usermag.co [http://usermag.co]           Support my work on Patreon: http://patreon.com/taylorlorenz [http://patreon.com/taylorlorenz]      Cydney Hayes is a tech and business reporter at the Gazetteer SF.and she joins me for this week's Free Speech Friday to discuss her investigation into Patronscan, a creepy biometric surveillance system being integrated into bars and restaurants across the country.  We examine how these systems collect personal information, photograph and surveil patrons as they move from bar to bar, build databases, and raise serious questions about privacy, biometric tracking, facial recognition, and data collection. We discuss: * How PatronScan works * Why bars are adopting these systems * What information is collected * Privacy concerns surrounding biometric data * Facial recognition and surveillance technology * How customer databases are created * The legal controversies surrounding PatronScan * Why surveillance is expanding into everyday spaces * What this means for the future of privacy As surveillance technology spreads from airports and retail stores into restaurants, bars, and nightlife, it's becoming increasingly important to understand how these systems operate and what tradeoffs they create.

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jakson The Terrifying New Bounty Economy w/ Adam Aleksic (Etymology Nerd) & Aidan Walker kansikuva

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jakson Congress Just Declared War on the Internet: The Patriot Act For Online Spaces Is Here kansikuva

Congress Just Declared War on the Internet: The Patriot Act For Online Spaces Is Here

The Kids Act Could End Internet Freedom As We Know It.  SUPPORT MY WORK:  Buy a paid subscription to my newsletter at usermag.co [http://usermag.co]         Support my work on Patreon: http://patreon.com/taylorlorenz [http://patreon.com/taylorlorenz]     A massive new package of legislation, dubbed the "Kids Act," is moving through Congress with unprecedented speed. The package is a broad-based censorship and surveillance scheme that will affect every single American. In this episode of Free Speech Friday, I sit down with Adam Thierer, a senior fellow at the Foundation for Individual Rights and Expression (FIRE), to break down the terrifying reality of what’s happening in Washington D.C. right now. Adam, who has been fighting for internet freedom since the 1990s, explains how these laws demand mass age verification (which applies to adults too), regulate design features like infinite scroll, and even target messaging apps and VPNs.   We also dive into the 1,800 AI bills popping up across states, Bernie Sanders' misguided plans for AI, and why the government is moving to create an identity layer for the entire internet. We also discuss the toxic brew of "moral panic," fake anti-big tech sentiment, and censorship that is driving this legislation forward. Topics covered: * What the Kids Act is and how it passed committee * Mass age verification and the internet ID layer * The end of online anonymity * Why messaging apps and video games are targets * State laws controlling the national internet * State AI preemption and Bernie Sanders' AI plans * The history of internet censorship from 1996 to today #AI #Tech #TechNews #InternetFreedom #KidsAct #Censorship #TechPolicy #OnlinePrivacy #AILaws #VPNBan #FreeSpeech #MassSurveillance #FirstAmendment #BigTech #BernieSanders #KOSA #DataPrivacy

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The Riskiest Bet in Tech History: Elon Musk's Most Dangerous Company Yet

SpaceX just pulled off the biggest IPO in history and made Elon Musk the world's first trillionaire. But is it all built on a fantasy? SUPPORT MY WORK:  Buy a paid subscription to my newsletter at usermag.co [http://usermag.co]        Support my work on Patreon: http://patreon.com/taylorlorenz [http://patreon.com/taylorlorenz]  In this week's episode of Power User, I sit down with Ryan Mac, the main New York Times reporter covering SpaceX and co-author of Character Limit: How Elon Musk Destroyed Twitter, to unpack how SpaceX went from a startup mocked by aerospace veterans to a $2+ trillion company that governments, militaries, and your retirement fund now depend on. We trace the full story from the early rocket explosions, the near-bankruptcy before Falcon 1 reached orbit in 2008, the NASA contract that saved the company, and how reusable rockets and Starlink turned SpaceX into an unstoppable money machine with 10,000 satellites in orbit.  We dive deep into Elon's trillion-dollar bet on "orbital data centers," his plan to move AI infrastructure into space, the acquisition of xAI, the Cursor deal, a possible Tesla–SpaceX merger, and his 82% voting control that makes him almost impossible to challenge. Is Elon Musk now too big to fail? Has he escaped the gravity of accountability? Or will his dreams of putting data centers in space come crashing back to Earth? And if/when that happens, who's left holding the bag? Ryan and I get into all of it. In this episode: – How SpaceX was founded and almost died – Why Starlink became the company's cash engine – Reusable rockets, barge landings, and the "chopsticks" catch – The plan to put AI data centers in space (and why experts are skeptical) – Inside the record-breaking SpaceX IPO – How index funds and 401ks got pulled into SpaceX – Elon's 82% control and the road to "Elon Inc" – Whether Musk is now the most powerful man on Earth

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