Nos sets de peinture vous fournissent une gamme de couleurs et de pinceaux dans une boîte pratique. De plus, regardez des vidéos assorties pour les utiliser.
Do not augment others in ways you would not accept being augmented yourself, without their explicit, informed, and revocable consent.
| Source | Explanation | Example | |--------|-------------|---------| | | AR can capture/display real-world data intrusively | Pointing an AR camera at a stranger and instantly showing their name, salary, or medical info | | Grief & death rituals | Interacting with the dead via AR violates sacred mourning practices | Forcing an AR avatar of a deceased child onto a grieving parent | | Consent & autonomy | Altering someone’s perceived reality without their permission | AR graffiti on a person’s face during a live conversation | | Social hierarchy | AR that disrespects authority or tradition | Overlaying mocking captions on a religious leader during a ceremony | ar taboo
This guide is intended for students, developers, policymakers, and general readers interested in understanding why certain uses of AR provoke discomfort, rejection, or active prohibition. An AR taboo is an unwritten social rule or ethical boundary that discourages or forbids specific uses of Augmented Reality. Unlike legal prohibitions (e.g., spying laws), taboos arise from collective moral intuition, fear of social consequences, or psychological revulsion. Do not augment others in ways you would
| Factor | VR | AR | |--------|----|----| | | Low (often solo) | High (interacting with real bystanders) | | Consent boundary | Clear (entering a game) | Fuzzy (camera always on) | | Persistence | Session-based | Can be anchored to real locations for years | | Harm type | Psychological mostly | Psychological + social + reputational | Unlike legal prohibitions (e