Written for whoever's setting the rule — a school administrator, an HR lead, a venue manager — not just the person wearing the glasses.
A recording light asks people to trust a setting. A covered lens is a policy anyone can enforce with a glance.
For schools
Test day shouldn't come with a camera in the room, and neither should the hallway between classes. Smart glasses quietly reopen the "no recording" question a phone ban was supposed to have closed — both for exam integrity and for students who'd rather not be filmed by a classmate without asking. A clip-on cover gives schools something a written policy alone can't: a rule a hall monitor can actually verify at a glance, no confiscation required. Some schools hand them out the same way they'd hand out a test booklet — collected at the door, returned on the way out.
For workplaces
Most offices that don't allow phones on the floor aren't worried about the call — they're worried about the camera. Smart glasses reopen that door quietly, one pair at a time. Treating a covered lens the way you'd treat a phone locker, or a line in the employee handbook, gives a privacy policy something to point to besides good faith.
For venues
Comedy clubs, theatres, courtrooms, private events, spas — anywhere a "please don't record" request has ever been politely ignored. Handing someone a lens cover at the door does the same job a phone pouch does for a phone: it turns a request into something everyone in the room can see being followed.
Ordering for a group?
If you're outfitting a classroom, a floor, or a door list, get in touch at support@lensnope.com — happy to talk quantities.