How It Works

A visual off switch for someone else's smart glasses.

LensNope is a clip-on cover for camera-equipped smart glasses — including Ray-Ban Meta. It sits over the lens, so the people around you can see the camera is covered — not just trust an LED.

The problem

Smart glasses put a camera on someone's face, pointed at everyone around them. Some glasses ship with a small recording light meant to tell you when that's happening — but that light can be defeated. In late 2025, reports surfaced of a paid mod that permanently disables the recording LED on certain glasses, so the wearer can film without anyone knowing.

You can't out-argue a hidden camera. You can put a cover on it.

How it works

  1. Clip it on. LensNope snaps over the front lens of your glasses in about two seconds — no tools, no adhesive.
  2. The camera is physically blocked. Not muted in software, not toggled by a setting — covered.
  3. Everyone can see it. That's the point. A blocked lens is something people can verify with their own eyes, the same way they'd notice a lens cap on a camera.
  4. Pop it off when you want it back. LensNope is designed to go on and off in seconds, so it fits real life instead of sitting in a drawer.

Materials

Studio Edition. A clean, durable shell with a soft felt lining that protects your lens and frame coating.

The Atelier Collection. Leather, wood, stone, and inlaid finishes — made to order, so your clip matches your glasses instead of looking like an accessory bolted on top.

Note: this is a physical accessory, not a hack, jailbreak, or software modification. It doesn't alter how your glasses function — it covers the lens.

LensNope is an independent accessory maker and is not affiliated with, sponsored by, or endorsed by Meta Platforms, Inc. or Luxottica Group S.p.A.