California woman who drove with Google Glass beats traffic ticket

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A California woman ticketed for driving while wearing Google Glass, a tiny computer mounted on an eyeglass frame, had her citation dismissed on Thursday by a San Diego court commissioner who said he found no proof the device was operating at the time.
Technology entrepreneur Cecilia Abadie, one of thousands of people testing the device for Google Inc, was stopped for speeding in October by the California Highway Patrol in San Diego.
The officer then gave her a second citation for using a visual “monitor” in her car while driving, in what the Highway Patrol said was a violation of state law.
Court Commissioner John Blair said he was dismissing the citation against Abadie, 44, on the grounds of a lack of proof that her Google Glass was turned on at the time but added that Google Glass “falls within the purview and intent” of the ban on driving with a monitor enacted by the California legislature.
“There is no testimony it was operating or in use while Ms. Abadie was driving,” he said during the hearing.
Blair also dismissed a speeding ticket against Abadie, because an expert did not appear to testify to the calibration on the officer’s speedometer.
Abedie said outside the court after the ruling on Thursday that Google Glass does not give drivers any “blind spot.”
“I believe we have to start experimenting with devices like this,” Abadie told reporters. “As a hands-free device it is safer than a cell phone.”
Google Glass, which projects a small screen in the corner of a wearer’s eye, is expected to become a major catalyst for what many believe to be the next big trend in mobile, wearable computing devices.
The device is not yet available for sale to the general public, although the company is testing the product with the help of thousands of so-called “Explorers” who have been given early access to the technology. It is expected to come to market later this year.
“Glass is built to connect you more with the world around you, not distract you from it,” Google said in a statement.
Explorers should “always use Glass responsibly and put their safety and the safety of others first,” the company said.