It's only been a few months since the infamous anti-Google Glass bar incident in San Francisco, and now it looks like some users of the device are fighting back. It all started in April when Google Glass user Katy Kasmai was asked to remove her device at a restaurant called Feast in New York City. Instead of complying with the request, she decided to leave. But soon after, Kasmai posted a one-star review of the restaurant, setting off the latest in a series of public debates about Glass.

Kasmai's review, which appears on Google's restaurant reviews, reads, "Got denied service on a Sunday afternoon for wearing Google Glass."

In addition to the short one-star review, she also posted the following message to her Google+ page, which has over 3,000 followers:

"For the first time ever this place, Feast, in #NYC just asked that I remove +Google Glass because customers have complained of privacy concerns in the past. Never has happened to me before in the one year I've had Glass."

What happened next was a series of similarly negative messages posted on the review page and in the comments of Kasmai's Google+ post, criticizing the restaurant for its anti-Google Glass policy.

Image: Google

Kasmai is the organizer of a Google Glass user group in New York City, so support for her position was likely bolstered by her ties to the Glass community, as well as her role as an unofficial ambassador for the device.

On user forums and websites, there are numerous conversations describing both positive and negative experiences related to using Glass in public. However, these conversations are rarely leveraged in such a public way against an establishment that prohibits the use of Glass on its property.

"When the first thing that comes up when you search Feast in Google is a 3.1, it can really hurt a restaurant like us," the restaurant's manager told EV Grieve, a local blog covering New York's East Village community. "Then you have 13 people, which is about half the total reviews, who have never been to our restaurant let alone live in NYC, leave you one-star reviews … It's malicious and technically a violation of Google's own terms for leaving reviews."

Weeks after the initial review, the incident spilled over to Twitter, where Kasmai and the restaurant exchanged public messages.

@KatyKasmai at the end of the day, it's not like we did this bc we don't like u or glass. It's a direct result of other guest complaints — f e a s t (@feastnyc) May 23, 2014

But despite criticism from other Glass fans, it appears that most commenters on the original review support the ban. In the past week, many commenters who posted on the restaurant's Google review page offered their support.

"Any restaurant that stands up to the Google Glass bullies deserves 1,000 stars." - Becky Savastio "I love the idea of kicking out douchebags who wear google glass." - Daniel Bonthius "[Feast] does not to deserve to be bullied by Glassholes who are trying to destroy its reputation with bullsh*t one-star reviews online." - Juan Carlos Molina "Very happy to be away from privacy-invading #Glass. Luddites serve the best food!" - Bill Ninjaman

On Yelp, Feast currently has a strong 4-star rating, with only several reviewers mentioning Glass, most of whom also support the ban.

In follow-up tweets captured in a screenshot and posted on Kasmai's blog, it appears that the two parties have may have come to a resolution.

Still, the incident may foreshadow similar conflicts in the future, particularly now that Glass is available to all consumers.