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Big Tech and Fashion Think They've Finally Figured Out Smart Glasses

Big Tech and Fashion Think They've Finally Figured Out Smart Glasses

Technofuturists have touted smart glasses as the next big device off and on for more than a decade. They were wrong, often embarrassingly so, because wearables makers were either laser-focused on the underlying technology at the expense of style — epitomised by the dorky Google Glass, which even a cameo in a Diane Von Furstenberg runway show couldn't make cool — or simply bolted half-baked features on existing products.
In the last few months, we've seen mounting evidence that tech and fashion are finally rowing in the same direction.
This week, Meta bought a minority stake in the eyewear maker EssilorLuxottica for $3.5 billion, doubling down on the unexpected success of the two companies' smart glasses collaboration, which began with Ray-Ban and now includes Oakley. Meta is also reportedly planning an eyewear line with Prada, whose eyewear EssilorLuxottica holds a 10-year license to produce.
In May, Google — already back in the smart glasses game via a deal with Samsung — announced partnerships with Warby Parker, Gentle Monster and Kering Eyewear, which makes glasses for Kering brands including Gucci and Bottega Veneta, as well as other labels such as Cartier, Alaïa and Puma. The deal with Warby Parker included an investment of $150 million by Google, while its tie up with Gentle Monster reportedly involved a $100 million investment, though neither company has confirmed the news.
Apple, which knows a thing or two about making wearables fashionable with its Apple Watch, is gearing up to release its own smart glasses in 2026, according to Bloomberg, while Chinese tech giant Xiaomi recently unveiled its version of the technology.
These are major investments, and the market is brimming with optimism. Warby Parker's stock is up by more than one-quarter since the Google investment was announced.
But after so many prominent failures, why do tech giants, fashion executives and investors believe this time will be any different?
The clearest reason is the surprise success of the second generation of Ray-Ban Meta glasses, which debuted in late 2023 and as of February had sold more than 2 million pairs. The company plans to scale production to 10 million units annually by the end of next year.
Those results have created confidence that consumers will actually buy smart glasses if they're done right. The Ray-Ban Meta glasses offer a number of functionalities, from capturing photos and videos to live streaming on Instagram, while being able to maintain the classic look of Ray-Ban styles like the Wayfarer. Meta has also augmented the glasses with AI features, such as live translation of a few languages, the ability to identify landmarks or get directions and general informational searches.
Those capabilities point to another cause for the rash of activity: 'It's a bit of a race to leverage the AI models,' said TD Cowen analyst Oliver Chen.
The expectation appears to be that, as AI advances, AI-powered smart glasses will be able to add new abilities to make them more useful — and therefore more desirable to consumers who will get all sorts of features in a package that finally just looks like a regular pair of sunglasses.
The latest smart glasses boom could fizzle out just like last time, and the time before. After all, it's still a novelty to see someone wearing Meta Ray-Bans in public. But unlike the Google Glass, you don't feel secondhand embarrassment for the wearer.
THE NEWS IN BRIEF
FASHION, BUSINESS AND THE ECONOMY ()
Trump announced 25 percent tariffs on Japan and South Korea in August. The duties, which are set to begin on Aug. 1, are largely in line with the rates Trump had initially imposed. The announcement was the first of an expected wave of trade deals this month.
Amazon Prime Day sales plunged 41 percent on the first day of its four-day event. Preliminary results indicated the e-commerce giant's gamble on doubling the duration of its summer sales event didn't pan out. The poor results have become a sign of cautious consumer sentiment as President Trump's trade war pans out.
Italy's Cucinelli posted a 10.7 percent increase in first half revenues. The sales, which totalled €684 million, slightly beat analyst expectations by and rose 10 percent in the Americas and 13 percent in Asia, bolstered by double-digit growth in China.
Levi foresaw robust revenue growth mostly offsetting tariff impact. Revenue for the quarter ending June 1 rose 6 percent to $1.4 billion, beating analyst expectations. The denim maker raised its revenue outlook between 1 and 2 percent for the current fiscal year.
S&P cut Saks' credit rating over its new financing package. The department store operator's credit rating has fallen 10 rungs below investment grade to CC, a downgrade that the agency said is in line with its view that Saks' $600 million financing package is 'tantamount to a default.'
Shein filed for a Hong Kong IPO to save its London listing. With the filing, the fast-fashion giant hopes to increase pressure on British regulators to approve its planned London debut, according to the Financial Times. If the UK Financial Conduct Authority accepts the Shein IPO, London would reportedly still be Shein's preferred exchange.
Canada Goose's private equity backer weighed a stake sale. Controlling shareholder Bain Capital is working with advisers as it contemplates selling part or all of its holding in the luxury parka maker.
Ralph Lauren's CEO sees 'resilient' demand amid tariff uncertainty. Patrice Louvet said demand for the American luxury brand's core products including cable-knit sweaters remains strong enough to offset cautious consumer spending.
The UK's Mulberry raised $27 million from top investors as revenue dropped. The brand reported a 21 percent drop in annual revenue on Thursday, but raised capital with the support of its two largest shareholders, Chalice and Frasers. Frasers executive James France also joined Mulberry's board.
Uniqlo owner's profit missed estimates on weak China sales. Fast Retailing Co. reported third-quarter operating profit of 146.7 billion yen ($1 billion) in the three months ending in May, trailing analyst estimates of 150 billion yen. Revenue in China declined by 5 percent off weaker consumer sentiment.
The UK arrested four people linked to M&S and Harrods cyberattacks. The British National Crime Agency arrested three teenage males and one 20-year-old female in the West Midlands and London on suspicion of several offences, including violations of the Computer Misuse Act.
Jane Birkin's original Hermès Birkin sold for $10 million. The sale at Sotheby's in Paris to a private collector in Japan broke the global record for most valuable handbag ever sold at auction, previously set in 2021 by a $513,000 Christie's sale of the Hermès Himalaya Kelly.
Claire's considers bankruptcy for US operations. The tween retailer has been working with Houlihan Lokey Inc. to strengthen its finances while weighing a sale of all or part of its operations.
Amina Muaddi opened its first store. The new location for the seven-year-old women's footwear and accessories brand is at 6 Avenue Montaigne in Paris, where customers can also purchase a capsule collection launched by the brand to commemorate the opening.
Birkenstock cracked down on fakes in India. After the German brand filed an infringement lawsuit in the Delhi High Court in May against footwear traders, four factories and two unnamed individuals, Indian court-appointed legal representatives inspected small-scale factories in recent weeks to seize counterfeit Birkenstock footwear.
Heron Preston bought back his brand from New Guards Group. The designer has reacquired full, exclusive rights over his namesake label, which launched in 2017, from the Farfetch-owned holding company. Financial terms were not disclosed.
Victoria & Albert Museum will stage a Schiaparelli exhibition in London. 'Schiaparelli: Fashion Becomes Art' will open on March 21 next year and include over 200 items, including Elsa Schiaparelli's surrealist dresses made in collaboration with Salvador Dalí. Current creative director Daniel Roseberry's works will also be shown.
THE BUSINESS OF BEAUTY (Courtesy)
Ulta Beauty acquired Space NK. Ulta announced Thursday that it has purchased the British beauty retailer from its previous owner Manzanita Capital for an undisclosed sum, though previous reports have valued the company at upwards of $300 million. The deal will give the American beauty conglomerate access into the UK market.
Trump said pharmaceutical tariffs could reach 200 percent. The US president added that he would give drugmakers roughly a year to negotiate. The Trump administration has posited that heavy reliance on foreign production of medicine is a national security threat, but drugmakers are concerned duties could increase the chance of medication shortage.
PEOPLE (Courtesy)
Michael Burke was tapped to lead LVMH Americas. The former Louis Vuitton chief executive and LVMH veteran will move to New York to begin his role as chairman and CEO of LVMH Americas, tasked with 'representing and promoting the best interests of the group in North and South America,' the company said.
Nike replaced Converse's CEO in a bid to reverse its sales slump. Nike VP and general manager Aaron Cain, a 21-year veteran, will take the reins at Converse to help revive its sales. He succeeds Jared Carver, who is exiting after two years as CEO.
Compiled by Jessica Kwon.
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Google shuts down free feature that made using apps easier

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Nahttypen.com – Trusted, AI-Free Human Content Daily
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Trump's FTC chairman is becoming MAGA's answer to Lina Khan
Trump's FTC chairman is becoming MAGA's answer to Lina Khan

Yahoo

time4 hours ago

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Trump's FTC chairman is becoming MAGA's answer to Lina Khan

(Bloomberg) — To American business leaders who hoped that Donald Trump's return to the White House would immediately usher in an era of unfettered deal-making, Andrew Ferguson seemed like a cold shower. Singer Akon's Failed Futuristic City in Senegal Ends Up a $1 Billion Resort Why Did Cars Get So Hard to See Out Of? Can Americans Just Stop Building New Highways? How German Cities Are Rethinking Women's Safety — With Taxis Philadelphia Trash Piles Up as Garbage Workers' Strike Drags On In early meetings with CEOs, congressional testimony and public statements, Trump's head of the Federal Trade Commission echoed the tough-cop messaging of his controversial predecessor Lina Khan: If corporate conduct or a proposed merger would hurt Americans, he would say, 'I'm taking you to court.' The 39-year-old stood behind new Biden-era merger guidelines. He's kept aggressive cases against Meta Platforms Inc. and Inc. and continued the previous administration's investigation of Microsoft Corp. Yet nearly six months in, a more nuanced picture is emerging. Ferguson's FTC reached settlements in several multibillion dollar megadeals and dismissed one Biden-era lawsuit altogether. He has acknowledged harm from mergers, but eschews the language of a traditional trustbuster, saying dealmaking can be 'fuel for the fires of innovation.' What Ferguson does share with Khan is an expansive – and relatively novel – approach to the agency's authority to police what it deems anti-competitive behavior. Like Khan, he believes that high prices aren't the only evidence of harm to consumers, a framework that gives Ferguson a lot of latitude to use the agency's enforcement arm to support Trump's broader agenda. To that end, he opened an investigation into allegations that conservative speech has been suppressed online and called out 'collusion or unlawful coordination on DEI employment metrics' as a target of a task force on labor market harms. On July 9, the agency held a policy workshop to 'explore unfair or deceptive practices' by doctors performing gender affirming care. 'Andrew is exactly the right person for this role at this time,' said James Burnham, a prominent conservative attorney who recently stepped down as the general counsel of the Department of Government Efficiency, and a close friend of Ferguson. 'He has a strong grounding in classical conservative thought—both in general and about antitrust specifically—but isn't a reflexive adherent of the old way.' To critics, Ferguson is playing politics, bending the authority of his agency to Trump's agendas. 'I agree with a fair amount of what he says about antitrust, but very little of what he has done,' said Rebecca Kelly Slaughter, a Democratic commissioner at the agency from 2018 until Trump fired her in March. 'He had a real opportunity to build on the bipartisan effort to reign in corporate power, but instead he's greenlighting multi-billion dollar deals, fighting culture wars, and hollowing out the agency.' Ferguson declined multiple requests for an interview. Bloomberg spoke with more than two dozen government officials, outside lawyers and other people who know the chairman for this story, and both friends and professional adversaries described him as a brilliant lawyer and a savvy political operator with far-reaching ambition. His resume has the hallmarks of a candidate for a judicial appointment. Ferguson has mused privately that he could be qualified for a seat on the federal bench and possibly even the Supreme Court someday, according to people who heard the remarks and asked not to be identified because the conversations were private. FTC spokesperson Joe Simonson said Ferguson is focused on his work at the FTC. 'The only thing he hopes is that he can help deliver President Trump's agenda, which includes a fair marketplace, lower prices, and justice for wronged American consumers,' he said. Ferguson has seized a wide range of opportunities to align himself with the president. In a late 2024 statement supporting the FTC's judgement on an online shoe retailer's return policies, Ferguson included a litany of complaints about censorship of topics like the the 2020 election results, the safety of Covid-19 vaccines and other issues. More recently, he said Trump was within his rights to fire Slaughter and Alvaro Bedoya, the other Democratic commissioner at the agency. They have filed suit challenging their removal, and their case is working its way through the federal courts. Now the traditional five-member bipartisan panel is down to three Republicans, including Melissa Holyoak, who is expected to be nominated to be US Attorney for Utah. That would would leave Ferguson and Mark Meador alone on the commission. Historically, antitrust enforcers at the FTC and at the Department of Justice have viewed themselves akin to umpires, apolitically calling balls and strikes on mergers and other corporate conduct. That began to shift at the DOJ during the first Trump administration, then gained steam at the FTC under Khan, with both agencies using their powers to further presidential priorities. Ferguson has criticized Khan for overreaching. At the same time, he's continuing her focus on the tech industry and on labor market abuses that, he agrees, hurt workers. He has also distanced himself from prior Republican administrations. A muscular FTC is here to stay, he reportedly said at a closed-door meeting with corporate executives this spring: 'I want to be really clear about something: This isn't the Bush administration." Raised in rural Virginia, Ferguson majored in history, then got his law degree, at the University of Virginia. In 2016, he went to clerk for Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas, a stint that he has said cemented his relationship with one of the country's most stalwart conservatives. It also persuaded Ferguson, who is firmly pro-life and in 2022 converted to Catholicism, that the best way to overturn Roe vs. Wade was to put more like-minded judges on the federal bench. It also funneled him quickly into roles on Capitol Hill, first with the Senate Judiciary Committee then as a top aide to former Majority Leader Mitch McConnell. He led work that focused the body's attention on confirming Trump-picked judges, and in 2021, McConnell praised his 'stunningly outsized imprint' on the judiciary. Ferguson, he said, had been 'indispensable' to the Supreme Court confirmations of Justices Brett Kavanaugh and Amy Coney Barrett, as well as dozens of lower-court appointees. Once Trump left office, Ferguson volunteered for Republican Glenn Youngkin's gubernatorial campaign in Virginia. When Youngkin won, he made Ferguson solicitor general, a post that created an opportunity to collaborate with the Biden administration on the one area where they shared common ground: antitrust. Ferguson was highly involved in the investigation and eventual lawsuit by the Justice Department and state attorneys general over the advertising business of Alphabet Inc.'s Google, which was filed in Virginia federal court. When the tech giant moved to transfer the case to New York, Ferguson personally argued in court for Virginia and the other states—and won. Around that time, Senate leaders turned to Ferguson to join the FTC as one of its Republican commissioners. He initially hesitated to join 'one of the alphabet soup agencies,' he said in a podcast with Burnham. But ultimately, he went on, he was persuaded by the agency's growing profile and the 'importance of doing real consumer protection work.' In the minority on the commission, he found common cause with the Khan's progressive majority on policing big tech and healthcare. At the same time he also wrote more than 400 pages of dissents, often in opposition to Khan's views of expansive agency power. That includes his criticism of a popular regulation to ban non-compete agreements in employment contracts, agreeing that the provisions are a problem for the labor market but saying that Khan exceeded the FTC's scope of authority. The rule was challenged by business groups including the US Chamber of Commerce and overturned by a federal judge late last year. The FTC has until September 8 to decide whether to continue to defend the rule. After a tepid start to the year, deals are ticking up. Corporate leaders seem less fazed by shifting trade policies, and Ferguson's 'see you in court' rhetoric has been tempered by his willingness to make deals. He has criticized the prior administration for its refusal to negotiate settlements, saying that if his agency can resolve its issues with a proposed merger, it will 'get the hell out of the way.' His concerns, too, may also be resolved with more novel compromises. In May Ferguson launched an investigation into ad agencies, alleging that they colluded in politically motivated ad boycotts, a bugbear of conservative media and owner Elon Musk in particular. Shortly after, the FTC signed off on Omnicom Group's $13.5 billion buyout of rival Interpublic, a tie-up that would create the world's biggest ad agency. To secure the regulator's approval, the two groups promised they wouldn't engage in any such boycotts in the future, but made no economic concessions. That deal may prove to be a template for the FTC under Ferguson. By focusing attention on the alleged ad boycotts and leaving the underlying businesses untouched, the terms appealed to the MAGA faithful and corporate interests. The Omnicom settlement however also engendered criticism from some government officials, including Republicans, who have privately cast the settlement as a shakedown and as a violation of the First Amendment, according to people who asked not to be identified in order to speak candidly. Simonson, the FTC spokesperson, strongly rejected both claims, saying that the agency 'works for the American people' and pointing to Ferguson's statement at the time which cited a Republican congressional investigation into coordinated conduct in the advertising industry. Thriving in the Trump administration can be precarious business. Ferguson has on multiple occasions compared the attention of the White House to the 'Eye of Sauron'— the powerful all-seeing antagonist in the Lord of the Rings trilogy, according to people who have heard him use the phrase and asked not to be identified because the conversations were private. Simonson denies that Ferguson ever made that comment. 'The Chairman enjoys a productive and positive relationship with the White House and is honored to work for President Trump,' Simonson said. White House spokesman Kush Desai said Ferguson 'continues to be a champion for President Trump's agenda of protecting American consumers, standing up for free speech against censorship, and unleashing economic growth.' In internal agency communications, Ferguson tends to avoid the political and cultural tropes he deploys publicly, according to people who asked not to be identified because they were not authorized to speak about agency matters. Staff say he is hard-working and engaged on cases, and both critics and supporters say he is generally concerned about getting it right. But some staff do have concerns about Ferguson's interest in using the agency to pursue what they see as social policy. Almost 150 employees joined an anonymous statement opposing the growing body of work against gender affirming care, saying 'this is not the FTC's lane.' At a July 9 workshop titled 'The Dangers of 'Gender-Affirming Care' for Minors,' Ferguson said that probing doctors for misleading claims about gender care is no different than many other cases the FTC has brought in the past. 'Time and time again we have enforced the FTC Act against businesses and individuals who have made claims about their health products and services that were not backed by scientific evidence,' he said. Chad Mizelle, chief of staff at the Justice Department attended the event; later in the day, the DOJ announced subpoenas of more than 20 doctors and clinics who provide gender-related medical care for children. Dealmaking is continuing to rise. Data compiled by Bloomberg show that M&A advisers are now on course for their best year since 2022, feeling confident about more ambitious merger activity through the rest of 2025 and into next. The agency is navigating the uptick with a shrinking staff. In keeping with the Trump administration's drive to reduce the government workforce, Ferguson told Congress in May that he wants to shrink the agency's headcount to around 1,100, down 15% from the start of the year. Simonson said the cuts would return the FTC to 2021 staffing levels. Ferguson's remaining plans for the FTC will likely continue to mix traditional agency enforcement actions and culture war missives. How long he will head the FTC is unclear, with supporters and critics expecting him to be nominated for a judgeship before Trump's term is up. 'Could I see him being a federal judge? Yes,' said Garrett Ventry, a Republican lobbyist and former senate staffer who worked on the Hill alongside Ferguson and considers him a close, personal friend. 'Same for a big job at DOJ. He's extremely smart and well connected. He backs the president's agenda. This is not performative.' Alvaro Bedoya, one of the fired Democratic FTC commissioners and a key Ferguson foil agrees – to a point. 'He has a singular intellect and could be a brilliant law enforcer,' Bedoya said. That's undermined by fealty to the administration, he said: 'You can't be a trustbuster and a culture warrior at the same time.' —With assistance from Leah Nylen, Fareed Sahloul and Zoe Tillman. Trump's Cuts Are Making Federal Data Disappear 'Our Goal Is to Get Their Money': Inside a Firm Charged With Scamming Writers for Millions Soccer Players Are Being Seriously Overworked Will Trade War Make South India the Next Manufacturing Hub? Trade War? No Problem—If You Run a Trade School ©2025 Bloomberg L.P. Error in retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data

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