Are normal clear plastic safety glasses good enough for protection when using CO2 laser cutters?
Depends on the power of the CO2 laser and how long you stay in the beam while the plastic is melting.
I would want more protection if I were working on a 2000 watt Rofin Sinar, since the beam would burn through the plastic, my eyeball, skull, brain, back of skull, and the wall behind me. For an unfocused 40 watt laser engraver though, I think the plastic will be good protection, along with whatever protective cover the laser has on it.
You can put a power meter behind one of these goggles and measure how much 10,600nm gets through (before the plastic has melted). It will not be much if any. Salt goggles would be a bad idea.
The biggest danger IMO in these Chinese engravers is the HV supply and the water cooling. I much more like my air cooled RF excited Synrads.