AI is moving into wearable workplace devices
AI is no longer only something staff use through a computer screen.
AI enabled wearable devices are becoming more capable. They may include smart glasses, body worn cameras, microphones, sensors, health devices, location tools or devices that capture what the user sees and hears.
The Times has reported that employers need stronger AI governance frameworks for wearable technology because these devices can collect audio, camera and sensor data in real time, raising privacy, employment and data protection concerns.
For businesses, this is important.
Wearable AI may help with training, site inspections, hands-free guidance, safety checks, operational support, note capture or workflow monitoring.
But it can also collect information about people who did not choose to use the device.
That is where governance becomes essential.
The risk is invisible or unclear data collection
The biggest risk with AI wearables is that people may not understand what is being captured.
A device may record audio in the background. It may capture customer conversations. It may process images of staff, visitors or documents. It may collect location or movement data. It may send information to a third party supplier.
That can create problems if the organisation has not properly considered consent, necessity, proportionality, data storage, access controls and staff awareness.
Common risks include:
- Staff not knowing when wearable AI is active
- Visitors or customers being recorded without clear notice
- Sensitive documents appearing in camera view
- Audio being captured during private conversations
- Biometric or health-related data being collected
- Managers using AI outputs for performance decisions without safeguards
- Data being transferred to suppliers without proper checks
- No clear policy for when devices must be switched off
- No escalation process if something goes wrong
GOV.UK guidance says employers must be able to justify staff monitoring and must tell employees they are being monitored and why.
That principle matters even more when devices are mobile, always-on or capable of capturing more than one type of data.
What SMEs should do before allowing AI wearables
SMEs should not wait until wearable AI becomes common before creating rules.
A practical review should ask:
- What device is being used?
- What data does it capture?
- Is audio, video, location, health or biometric data involved?
- Who is being recorded or monitored?
- Why is the device necessary?
- Is there a less intrusive option?
- Where is the data stored?
- Can the supplier access the data?
- How long is information kept?
- When must the device be switched off?
- How are staff, customers and visitors informed?
- Can outputs be used in performance decisions?
- Who owns the risk?
The ICO’s AI guidance includes support on AI and data protection, biometric recognition and risk assessment, which is relevant where AI-enabled devices collect or process personal information.
CAIT Group Ltd helps organisations create practical AI governance, staff AI policies, workplace monitoring reviews, vendor checks, management training and risk readiness processes.
The goal is not to block useful wearable technology.
The goal is to make sure it is used transparently, proportionately and with proper control.
Practical impact by organisation type
Individuals: Staff need to know when AI wearables are being used, what data is collected and whether outputs could affect them.
Small businesses: A simple wearable AI policy can prevent confusion, privacy concerns and accidental recording of sensitive information.
Medium businesses: Clear rules help teams use smart devices consistently across offices, sites, customer visits and operational settings.
Large businesses: Governance supports privacy, auditability, procurement checks, HR safeguards and supplier risk management.
Multinationals: Wearable AI policies need consistency across regions while respecting different privacy and employment expectations.
Public sector organisations: Extra care is needed where AI wearables may capture citizens, service users, vulnerable people, confidential documents or public-service interactions.
CAIT Services
This story connects directly to CAIT Group Ltd’s services:
- AI governance and policy readiness
- Workplace AI and wearable device risk reviews
- Staff AI usage guidance
- Data protection-aware AI adoption
- AI vendor and supplier checks
- Workplace monitoring policy support
- Management team AI training
- Human oversight and escalation planning
- Leadership decision making support
CAIT helps organisations understand what AI devices collect, where the risks sit and what practical controls should be in place before wearable AI enters the workplace.
Are staff, suppliers or teams starting to use AI enabled wearable devices at work?
We can help you review risks, create staff guidance, check suppliers and put clear rules around workplace AI devices before problems appear.