Needle-free blood monitoring, a mirror that's secretly a TV, and 11 more
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Needle-free blood monitoring, a mirror that's secretly a TV, and 11 more<br>Plus Google hiding trackers in your texts, and Sony scanning soil bacteria.
Patentlyze<br>Jun 29, 2026
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1. This watch reads your blood. No needle. Sony’s patent reads blood sugar or hydration by bouncing radar through your skin, no finger prick.<br>2. There’s a tracker hidden in your satellite texts. Google wants to fill the empty space in your phone’s satellite messages with reports of the devices around you, sent off without you knowing.<br>3. This mirror is secretly a TV. Samsung’s wall panel watches your gaze and flips between mirror and screen on its own.<br>4. Meta is grading how much you matter. Meta scores how active you are, then spends more ad-ranking power on heavy users and less on everyone else.<br>5. The PlayStation company is scanning soil bacteria. Sony filed a patent to gauge the health of a whole ecosystem by reading the microbes on plant roots.<br>6. Glasses that fix your eyes and show a screen. Meta’s patent fuses an AR display into a prescription lens, so one piece of glass sharpens your vision and projects a screen.<br>7. The ads are listening to your podcast. Google’s patent turns whatever you’re streaming into text and drops in the closest-matching ad.<br>8. Nvidia may have patented every AI image. Nvidia patented building images from pure noise with neural networks, with claims so broad they barely say anything specific.<br>9. An AI that pictures the answer first. Google’s system generates an internal image to reason through a question before it answers in text.<br>10. Pilot a robot from inside your Teams call. Microsoft’s patent lets you take over a field robot from the same shared meeting everyone is already in.<br>11. A screen that stretches and feels your touch. Samsung’s display stretches like a net without cracking and still senses where and how hard you press.<br>12. Meta wants to fingerprint real audio to kill deepfakes. Meta’s patent watermarks audio the moment it is recorded, so a real clip can be told apart from a fake.<br>13. It gives people their voice back. Google’s patent rebuilds stuttered or slurred speech, including ALS and cerebral palsy, into clear fluent audio in real time.
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