Failed, is the answer to your question.
You don't need stats to see this. Some things are obvious.
TL;DR When folks with a puerile love of crafting, implementing and
enforcing rules apply themselves to building a creative platform (as
opposed to a responsive framework built on and of inherent imbalance), the shit
hits the fan.
Google Glass was fundamentally flawed in a similar manner. It failed to understand the needs, desires and concerns of its audiences.
Potential users weren't happy about the pricing, nor that it was being rolled out as an endlessly uncertain beta in an obvious and failed attempt to obscure the uncertainty of its direction and purpose, and the compromises inherent to its conception, execution, design and implementation.
Further, these first class users, expected to pay the price of their time, cash, reverence and reputation to support and promote these devices were also expected to develop content for the platform. The expectations and desires of the platform are simply too high and stink of hubris.
Similarly, those best equipped with the wisdom and insights required to give great explanations of suitable demonstrations, samples and examples were flummoxed by the equivalency given to people with near no ability beyond press-record, copy/paste and exploitive desires.
Those potentially in front of someone using Google Glass were uncomfortable with the uncertainty of a camera being pointed at them, all the time, and not being able to ascertain its state or activity of the user. This is somewhat akin to not knowing the experience, wisdom, sources, insights and motivations of those "creating" SO.docs examples, nor any meaningful criticims of the content existing.
Despite considerable astro-turfing, the observations and criticisms of legitimate commentators and thinkers that Google Glass and SO.docs were fundamentally flawed in design, intention and execution rang truest. That nobody in a decision making capacity took these genuine concerns and criticisms seriously speaks volumes for the decision making process.
You can't regulate good behaviour: a culture, community and belief system must be created, cultivated and curated that promotes it. Most people have an innate understanding of this, except for one very special group of people: misanthropes. Their peculiar view of the world sees them thinking there can never be enough fascism and there's nothing wrong with any form of legal exploitation. This odd contradiction fits their peculiarly irrational logic perfectly, as they side with themselves against their own species, with the rules against humanity's best aspects.
Google Glass comes from this perspective, as does SO.docs