In a move that signals its growing commitment to wearable AI technology, Meta has acquired Limitless, a U.S.-based AI-device startup known for a pendant-style wearable that records and transcribes audio conversations. The deal — announced in early December 2025 — reflects Meta’s evolving strategy to expand beyond social media and embrace AI-powered consumer hardware.
Below is what the acquisition entails, how it affects users and the broader wearable-AI landscape, and what we can expect next.
What is Limitless — and why did Meta buy it?
Limitless (formerly known as “Rewind”) built a unique wearable: a pendant device that clips to clothing or hangs around your neck, capturing real-world conversations, then using AI to transcribe and summarize them for easy recall.
The device wasn’t just a recorder — it was part of a growing niche of “personal AI assistants” aimed at helping users archive and retrieve their daily spoken interactions and notes. For many, this wearable served as a memory aid, productivity booster, or a hands-free way to document meetings, lectures, and casual chats.
Meta’s acquisition of Limitless brings this technology — as well as the startup’s engineering team — under its roof. According to Meta, the acquisition aligns with its broader vision to deliver “AI-enabled wearables” and support “personal superintelligence.”
In short: Meta didn’t just buy a gadget — it bought a vision and the expertise to build future devices that blur the line between AI, hardware, and everyday human interaction.
What Happens to Limitless Products & Users
With the acquisition, Meta and Limitless announced immediate changes for current and future users:
- Pendant sales end now. Limitless will no longer sell its AI-wearable pendant to new customers.
- Support continues — for one year. Existing pendant owners will get support and access to functionality for at least the next year.
- Subscription fees canceled. Limitless says it is moving existing users to a free “Unlimited Plan.”
- Some services will be wound down. The company’s “Rewind” desktop software (used for capturing and searching desktop activity) will be discontinued. Users are encouraged to export or delete their data if desired.
So for now, current users get a grace period — but the wearable is effectively sunsetting in its current form.

What This Means for Meta’s AI & Wearable Strategy
Meta’s acquisition of Limitless is much more than a small buyout. It fits into a larger pattern:
- Meta has recently added veteran design talent and expanded efforts in AI-enabled hardware. The previously known emphasis on smart glasses and VR headsets now appears to broaden to include AI wearables beyond glasses.
- By integrating Limitless’s technology and team into its hardware division (likely under Reality Labs), Meta may work to embed AI functionalities — like voice transcription, smart memory, and ambient AI features — into future earbuds, glasses, or other wearable formats.
- The move highlights a shift across the tech industry: success in AI is no longer just about software or apps, but about AI-powered hardware that integrates seamlessly into daily life. For Meta, this could mean a renewed push into wearable computing and “ambient AI” — services that assist users without requiring a smartphone or a screen.
Critically, this acquisition reflects Meta’s evolving identity: not just a social-media giant, but an AI-first company with ambitions to reshape how we interact with technology — possibly through everyday devices focused on convenience, memory, and productivity.
What to Watch Out For: Privacy, Ethics, and User Control
With AI wearables that record conversations and everyday life, there are unavoidable concerns:
- Privacy and data security: Recording, transcribing, and storing conversations — whether personal chats or group discussions — raises significant privacy questions. Users will likely want guarantees about where data is stored, who can access it, and how long it’s retained.
- Regulation and legal issues: Different regions and countries have different laws around recording conversations; the legality of recording without consent can be complex. As devices become globally available, compliance might become more complicated.
- User consent and control: As Limitless transitions under Meta, users will need clear control over data export, deletion, and consent. The fact that some services are being “wound down” could leave data handling in flux.
- Ethical usage: AI wearables blur the line between private memory and surveillance — it remains to be seen how Meta will address responsible usage, transparency, and user rights.
Whether Meta’s future devices respect privacy or push boundaries will be critical — users and regulators alike will watch closely.
What’s Next — What to Expect from Meta + Limitless
Here’s what may happen in the coming months and years:
- New AI wearables: Meta might launch new hardware — possibly glasses, earbuds, or pendants — with built-in AI for voice transcription, memory tools, and context-aware assistance.
- Integration with Meta ecosystem: Facebook, Instagram, Messenger, and WhatsApp might gain deeper AI-based personal-assistant features — like auto-summaries of chats, searchable transcripts, or “memory vaults.”
- Improved AI experiences: With Limitless’s team onboard, Meta may speed up development of “ambient AI,” blending natural language, voice input, and machine intelligence more seamlessly.
- Privacy-first tools: Given public concern, Meta may attempt to lead with strong privacy safeguards — offering explicit consent flows, data control, on-device processing (rather than cloud), and opt-outs for user data.
For tech watchers and consumers alike, this acquisition could mark a turning point: the era of AI wearables may be just getting started.
Final Thoughts
Meta’s acquisition of Limitless brings a small but innovative startup into the fold of one of the biggest tech giants. While the Limitless pendant is being retired, its core AI technology and team gain new life under Meta’s ambitious plan to build smart, AI-enabled hardware for the masses.
If Meta can successfully harness this tech while respecting privacy and user control, the future of AI wearables — devices that learn from, record, and assist our daily lives — might be closer than we think.
For now, users should prepare for transitions: export data if needed, stay informed, and watch closely as Meta navigates the fine line between convenience and privacy.

