Meta Just Added a Paywall for One of Its Best Smart Glasses Features

Meta quietly added a rate limit and pay tier to its Ray-Ban and Oakley smart glasses. If you use the “Conversation Focus” feature, you are now limited to three hours of use a month, unless you subscribe to a Meta One Premium account for $20 a month. If so, you’ll get 15 hours of use per month; no rollover minutes.

Conversation Focus is an audio-enhancement feature that isolates the voice of the person you’re talking to, reduces ambient noise, and amplifies the voice back to you. It’s useful in crowded, noisy situations, particularly for people with mild hearing difficulties. Rate limiting this feature is particularly frustrating given how Conversation Focus actually works. No AI tokens are being spent to provide this service, and no outside computer is involved. The entire process takes place on your glasses’ hardware—it even works if you’re offline—so it’s an arbitrary limitation, a way of charging you for a feature that’s part of the hardware you’ve already paid hundreds of dollars for. It’s holding your own microphone hostage.

Meta One subscriptions get expensive for smart glasses owners

Meta offers an entry-level tier to Meta One for $7.99 a month, but it leaves smart glasses owners out in the cold. If you want extra minutes of Conversation Focus, that’s locked behind its most expensive “Premium” tier. Meta didn’t build a $20-a-month subscription specifically for the glasses; the charge seems designed to force users into a broader Meta AI subscription ecosystem. Other benefits to the premium tier include a “Thinking Mode” AI that provides more detailed answers for complex tasks inside the Meta AI app and web portal, and higher generation caps for AI-generated images and videos across Facebook, Instagram, Messenger, and WhatsApp—neither of which is all that useful if you just want to hear people better.

Alternatives to Meta glasses for Conversation Focus

Luckily, Meta isn’t the only company making smart glasses that can help you have conversations in noisy rooms. If you want a wearable that isn’t locked into Meta’s paywall, here are some alternatives to consider:

  • Even Realities G2: These visual glasses won’t amplify the voices around you; the glasses’ standout “Conversate” feature goes further by providing live subtitles for anyone talking to you. The glasses also save a transcript of the conversation and provide a post-chat, AI-generated summary of your interaction. There’s no monthly charge or time limit on this feature, but it does require a Bluetooth connection to your phone. Check out my review for insight into everything else these glasses can do.

  • Nuance Audio: If you’re using Meta glasses because of a hearing problem, Nuance Audio glasses from EssilorLuxottica do the same thing as Conversation Focus. These are over-the-counter hearing aid glasses, so they tend to be more expensive than off-the-rack smart glasses, but because they’re an FDA-cleared medical device, they’re eligible for pre-tax HSA funds, and some high-end medical insurance plans offer partial reimbursements for hearing aids.

  • XanderGlasses: These glasses are specifically designed as adaptive technology for people with hearing problems. They provide captions for people you’re talking to and do it without requiring a connection to your phone (or anything else). Downside: They provide no other features, look like medical glasses, and the price tag is steep at $4,999—it’s a one-time price, though; no monthly fees.

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