The ByeLED blog.
Long-form pieces on what the Ray-Ban Meta recording light actually does, why people remove it, how the ByeLED options compare, and the recording-law context that customers ask about most. Not legal advice — just plain-English explainers from a documented operator.
Reading material before you order.
Each post takes 5 to 10 minutes. If you would rather skip to the service pages, see How it works, Pricing, or the FAQ.
What the Ray-Ban Meta Recording Light Actually Does (and Why People Want It Off)
The white LED on the right temple lights up every time the camera captures. Here is what it signals, when it activates, and the four most common reasons customers ask ByeLED to remove it.
While-You-Wait vs. Mail-in: Which ByeLED Option Fits You
A side-by-side breakdown of the Wilmington walk-in, the Philadelphia mobile meet-up, and the nationwide mail-in — with the math on time, money, and where your glasses physically are.
Using Ray-Ban Meta as a Creator Camera: The Recording-Light Problem
A clean point-of-view camera is half the appeal of Ray-Ban Meta for vloggers and content creators. Here is why the indicator light gets in the way and how documented LED removal solves it.
Ray-Ban Meta at Concerts: When the Recording Light Becomes the Problem
The same indicator that makes the glasses obvious in a brightly lit cafe turns into the brightest thing on your face in a dark venue. Why concert-goers and event photographers ask for ByeLED.
Smart-Glasses Recording Laws: One-Party vs. Two-Party Consent in the US
A plain-English (not legal advice) primer on US audio-recording consent law and how it intersects with smart-glasses ownership. State-by-state notes for the four states ByeLED serves directly.