[5] At the end of the day the Clip uploads the photos and videos it made into the vendor's cloud service, where they are processed and organized into collections called Moments, available to the user through a web client or mobile apps.
Due to cashflow problems and a broad decline in venture capital interest in wearables during 2016, the original company had to shut down late 2016.
[10][11][12]The lifelogging idea and Narrative Clip captured the attention and imagination of magazines and newspapers worldwide, like Wall Street Journal,[13] Der Spiegel, New York Times International Herald, TechCrunch,[14] FastCompany,[15] Huffington Post,[16] Wired,[17] TheNextWeb,[18][19][20] Condé Nast Traveller,[21] Engadget [22][23][24][25] and The Verge.
[26] Swedish National TV News reported on the original Memoto company and camera and that it would be released in spring 2013.
[5] Some writers speculated about potential privacy concerns due to automatic photography, for example the Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF).