Hereâs the Truth About Whether Metaâs NameTag Face Recognition Tech âExistsâ
Does a software feature exist if its code has been deployed to the devices of millions of people but they canât use it yet? Not if you work at Meta.
The companyâs executives have spent the last few weeks making this semantic argument about NameTag, the in-development face-recognition system that Meta built for its smart glasses. The inevitable result is confusion, but thatâs easy enough to clear up.
On June 4, WIRED reported that Meta included robustâbut inactiveâcode for NameTag in Meta AI, the companion app for Meta Ray-Ban glasses that has been downloaded tens of millions of times. In response to our story, Andy Stone, Metaâs vice president of communications, responded in part by writing on X, âHere's a thing: Wired reports Meta didn't answer several questions about how this will work. How could we? The feature doesn't exist!â Meta removed the NameTag code from Meta AI the next day.
According to WIREDâs analysis of the Meta AI app, code for NameTag appeared in the app as early as January. In mid-February, The New York Times reported that Meta had been working on NameTag face recognition. By May, WIRED found, the core components of the NameTag code were present in the MetaAI app.
Whether the feature existed prior to Meta removing the code depends on how one defines âfeatureâ and âexist.â Whatever oneâs position, a researcher who goes by the name Buchodi reviewed the code at WIREDâs request, and was able to use the NameTag system to recognize a photograph of the face of the philosopher Michel Foucault, famed for his writing on surveillance as an instrument of power.
The claim that Meta had no way of describing how the feature worksâor even would workâwas further undercut last week, when Meta CTO Andrew âBozâ Bosworth did so in detail on a podcast.
On the July 8 episode of the The Most Interesting Thing in AI, host Nicholas ThompsonâCEO of The Atlantic and a former WIRED editor in chiefâasked who NameTag would identify during a part of the discussion labeled âWhatâs true and false about NameTag.â Bosworth replied: âSomebody you met in person with your glasses on who introduced themselvesâor you said, âOK, this is David, remember this person.â Only available to you when youâre wearing your glassesâthis is a person youâve met before. Hereâs their name. Theyâre right in front of you ⌠Thatâs what we call a NameTags feature.â
Bosworth later said of NameTag, âSo, it's a thing that, umâI think would be a great feature.â
In response to inquiries from WIRED about this apparent contradiction, Meta has repeatedly stressed the conditional nature of Bosworthâs statementâthat it âwould beâ a great feature, not that it is or will be. Spokesperson Ryan Daniels specifically highlighted the word âwould,â bolding and underlining it, in an email exchange with WIRED about the apparent disconnect between Stoneâs claim that NameTag doesnât exist and Bosworthâs minutes-long description of it.
"There is no contradiction. Boz says this 'would' be a good feature, particularly to answer the blind and low-vision community membersâ calls to help them identify people theyâve already met or want to remember,â Daniels tells WIRED in a statement. âWhile we're exploring this, it's not available to consumers today. We think itâs important that people understand this remains distinct from connecting glasses to a central database of people in the world, which is not a capability we are building."
To be clear, NameTag existed as of roughly six weeks ago. Meta had been building NameTag since early 2025âlicensing face-recognition software, assembling a full detection-and-matching pipeline, and adding it to the tens of millions of phones the app runs on, where it sat until WIRED reported on it. While it was not possible for people to actually use it without specialized tools, WIREDâs analysis of the Meta AI code, as well as that of two independent experts, found a technically functional face-recognition system within the app millions of people have on their phones. That system still exists, if you take Bosworthâs discussion of it at face value.
Even so, Meta has insisted, and continues to insist, that thatâs not quite true, in ways it declines to specify. Despite WIRED stating in the first full sentence of the June 4 article that the NameTag system was âunreleasedâ and reiterating that point repeatedly throughout, for example, Stone claimed on X that the story made this detail unclear. âThis is more than shoddy reporting, itâs intellectually dishonest,â Stone wrote. âPure advocacy-driven click bait.â Bosworth responded to Stoneâs X post by calling WIREDâs report âincredibly misleadingâ and âabsolutely dishonest.â
Meta did not answer WIREDâs questions about what its executives believed was misleading or dishonest about our NameTag reporting.
One point is clearly important to Meta: Bosworth asserted in his conversation with Thompson that NameTag will not rely on a âcentral database,â even though neither Thompson nor WIRED claimed or suggested it would. Instead, WIREDâs analysis of the app found, the NameTag system converts faces captured by Meta glasses and turns them into unique numerical signatures commonly known as âfaceprints.â These faceprints could be compared against a face database stored on usersâ devices that was populated by Metaâs servers.
The distinction between a âcentralâ database and millions of local databases (i.e., your phone and mine) connected to Metaâs servers is not merely academic. As Bosworth mentioned during his discussion with Thompson, some state laws, such as the Biometric Information Privacy Act (BIPA) in Illinois and Texasâ Capture or Use of Biometric Identifier Act (CUBI), limit companiesâ ability to publicly deploy face-recognition technology, which require people to explicitly consent to having their faces captured by face-recognition systems, among other guardrails.
Bosworth would know. In 2019, Meta abandoned its âTag Suggestionsâ automatic face-recognition feature on Facebook after a $5 billion settlement with the Federal Trade Commission over privacy issues, including face recognition, and before a $650 million settlement with the state of Illinois over Tag Suggestions specifically.
By keeping face-matching on the user's phone rather than queried from a central server, Meta may be positioning itself to argue it complies with the letter of state biometric laws like BIPA and CUBI, should it deploy the feature. Whether that general design is legally defensible is contested.
In 2021, a federal judge let a BIPA class action lawsuit over Appleâs Photos app proceed, holding that a company could plausibly âpossessâ faceprints stored on users' own devices because possession doesnât require exclusive control; that case was certified as a class action in June 2026 and is now awaiting a ruling on several motions.
But other courts have blessed the on-device approach: An Illinois appellate panel ruled in 2022 that Apple didn't âpossessâ Face ID data stored solely on usersâ devices, and a federal judge dismissed a near-identical suit over Samsung's photo app in 2024 because Samsung never received or accessed the face data its own software generated.
The dividing line in these cases hasn't been where the data sits so much as who controls itâwhether the feature is optional, whether users can disable it, and whether the company is capable of ever reaching the data.
When WIRED asked Meta in June whether NameTag would be opt-in and how the system retained faceprints and cropped images, it declined to answer. Asked about the question courts have treated as most importantâwhether the data ever leaves the device or can be reached by anyone besides the userâit would not explain why it licensed a third party's face-recognition software, when that arrangement began, or whether it continues.
Meta also did not answer WIREDâs questions this week about why the company continues to insist, even when no one is saying otherwise, that its face recognition tech does not use a central database.
Strip away the semantics, and the simple facts are these: Meta has designed and built a face-recognition system, at one point placed it on millions of phones, and appears to be seriously thinking about enabling it, and a prominent executive has sung its praises on a very public platform. Does NameTag exist? You can decide for yourself.
Additional reporting by Dell Cameron and Dhruv Mehrotra.
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