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Apple's new patent: use AR glasses to control the output of the iPhone screen to protect privacy

On November 12, according to Sina Digital, the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office this week unveiled a new patent filed by Apple that reveals a privacy feature designed to control the content displayed by the iPhone only through special glasses in order to protect privacy.

The patent application is a system that can display "visually corrected graphic output and standard graphic output" on electronic devices, the keyword is "privacy glasses". Interestingly, one of the features described in the patent is the "Privacy Glasses", which prevents people around you from seeing what is on your device's screen, since the only way to view the contents of the screen is through the glasses. If the user doesn't want someone nearby to see what's presented on the phone's screen, the patent makes the graphic output illegible.

In addition to new privacy technologies, Apple appears to be developing profiles for Face ID. The patent describes another system capable of distinguishing the unique details of the user's face, such as hairstyles, beards, beards, glasses, glasses, reading glasses, sunglasses, etc. Some have speculated that this may have been prepared for the addition of Face ID on future Macs.

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