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🔓 BREACH BRIEF🟢 Low📋 Advisory

Meta Offers Refurbished Ray‑Ban Smart Glasses at $197, Stock Selling Fast

Meta has begun selling refurbished first‑generation Ray‑Ban Stories smart glasses for as little as $197, with a one‑year warranty. The rapid sell‑out and limited refurbishment details raise security, warranty, and supply‑chain concerns for organizations that deploy wearables.

🛡️ LiveThreat™ Intelligence · 📅 April 14, 2026· 📰 zdnet.com
🟢
Severity
Low
📋
Type
Advisory
🎯
Confidence
High
🏢
Affected
3 sector(s)
Actions
3 recommended
📰
Source
zdnet.com

Meta Sells Refurbished First‑Gen Ray‑Ban Smart Glasses for $197 – Stock Moving Fast

What Happened – Meta has launched a limited‑time sale of refurbished first‑generation Ray‑Ban Stories smart glasses (Wayfarer, Headliner, Skyler) at prices as low as $197, each backed by a one‑year limited warranty (with an optional extended warranty for $40). The inventory is selling quickly, prompting buyers to act fast.

Why It Matters for TPRM

  • Refurbished wearables may run outdated firmware, increasing exposure to known vulnerabilities.
  • Limited warranty and unknown refurbishment processes can affect device reliability and data‑handling assurances.
  • Rapid depletion of stock may lead organizations to procure from secondary markets without proper vetting, raising supply‑chain risk.

Who Is Affected – Enterprises that equip employees with Meta Ray‑Ban smart glasses, managed service providers handling wearable deployments, and any third‑party that integrates these devices into corporate workflows.

Recommended Actions

  • Verify the firmware version on any refurbished units and ensure they receive the latest security patches.
  • Review warranty terms and refurbishment certifications before purchase.
  • Update device‑management policies to include lifecycle tracking for wearables sourced from secondary markets.

Technical Notes – The sale includes only first‑generation Ray‑Ban Stories models, which originally shipped with Android‑based OS and limited on‑device encryption. Refurbishment details are sparse; there is no public disclosure of hardware testing or software re‑imaging procedures. Organizations should treat these devices as potentially legacy assets with a higher likelihood of unpatched vulnerabilities. Source: ZDNet Security

📰 Original Source
https://www.zdnet.com/article/meta-ray-ban-refurbished-smart-glasses-selling-fast/

This LiveThreat Intelligence Brief is an independent analysis. Read the original reporting at the link above.

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