SAG-AFTRA reveals terms of ‘groundbreaking’ deal::Actors union SAG-AFTRA revealed specifics of its deal with the Alliance of Motion Picture and Television Producers in a press conference Friday.

  • @Touching_Grass
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    7 months ago

    Using AI to create voices and audiobooks sounds awesome though. I don’t like that people may lose their jobs. But using AI for this stuff seems like a natural progression. Having an audio book that shifts voices and tone easy but can also include sound effects and background noises would improve the audio. It would make these products better and likely cheaper. It would also give other creators a ton of ability to create their own stuff. Giving indie game developers tools to create games would be great.

    Id love to have a tool to read books to me that can parse any book. Even something like a textbook. I learn much better by listening and no reader has been able to do that yet,but AI looks promising.

    • @topinambour_rex
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      387 months ago

      But the original voice actor, the one which was used as model for the AI voice should gain something from what is generated from his voice.

      If they decide to put their voice as royalty free, fine, but if it is something who paid their bills by making recordings of their voice, not fine.

      • @Grimy
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        7 months ago

        deleted by creator

    • @linearchaos
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      177 months ago

      I don’t mind different voices, but books with sound effects are hot trash. If I want to watch a movie, if watch a movie. Let my mind do the work.

      • @Touching_Grass
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        47 months ago

        I disagree. I loved listening to old time radio programs that added ambiance with creaking doors and wind to set scenes

        • @redditron_2000_4
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          37 months ago

          Soundbooth Theater does “audio immersion” versions of some books and they are amazing. It is genre fiction, but if it they are your genres then you should check them out! (Horror, fantasy, sci-fi, etc)

      • @mr_tyler_durden
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        37 months ago

        Amen. If there are sound effects then I’m not interested. All of those audio presentations or whatever they are called sound so forced and over-acted.

      • @essteeyou
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        07 months ago

        If you haven’t listened to Project Hail Mary then I can understand your perspective. PHM works better as an audiobook than a regular book because of the “effects” in my opinion.

        • @linearchaos
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          17 months ago

          I’ve listened to that twice read by Ray Porter, who is my favorite audiobook narrator. I don’t remember there being any special effects in the book whatsoever on audible. The dude is just a master of different voices One of the reasons why he was so incredible in bobiverse.

          • @essteeyou
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            17 months ago

            Trying to avoid spoilers for others, but think about the other main character’s voice when they first meet.

    • Knitwear
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      7 months ago

      “Having an audio book that shifts voices and tone easy but can also include background noises”

      That’s not what you’re going to get. Even with A.I they all requires sound editing and reviewing and fixing errors which all costs money. We already have the tech to do A.I voice acting and I’ve tried a few. What we’ll get is what we have now, a single A.I voice with eerie intonation that modifies some words to their context but not others so it functions for a sentence but cannot emote a paragraph.

      • @Touching_Grass
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        17 months ago

        Are you saying that AI isn’t improving?

        I just read someone that said they listened to an audio book that did do this.

        • Knitwear
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          7 months ago

          No I’m saying that when we get a new game changing technology things don’t tend to become better produced, they become cheaper to produce cheaply and quality be damned

          • @abhibeckert
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            7 months ago

            The thing is a lot of audiobooks aren’t being produced at all right now, or aren’t being produced to an acceptable quality standard (not because the narrator is bad, but because they and they editor weren’t paid enough to get it right.

            In this case, I think cheaper production would result in better audiobooks.

          • @Touching_Grass
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            -17 months ago

            I think game changing tech is always better but we as consumers are complicit in allowing the erosion of the benefit because were complacent.

            Look at podcasts as an example. It beat the shit out of any other media at the time. Just hobbiest and funny people making content. Content that didn’t have any producers making sure people stayed on script. No ads, ever to interrupt or make creators panic about topics. Then rogan started pushing pocket pussies and everybody said its cool because its only 2 mins and skippable. Years later its now multiple unskippable ads on a paid service where we pay to avoid ads.

            The only time we could have stopped the current problem is when it wasn’t a problem. But we don’t have that foresight

            So game changing tech is great, if we keep it on track. Don’t let it erode.

            • @abhibeckert
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              7 months ago

              Years later its now multiple unskippable ads on a paid service where we pay to avoid ads.

              You must be listening to different podcasts to me. Those “hobbiest” content creators are still there, and they tend to have decent microphones now and have learned how to create fairly high production value content. Yes, they have ads, but they’re short and skippable (or even at the end of the episode) and you want them to get paid for their work right? Otherwise they won’t do it.

              Sure, shitty podcasts are also available. Just don’t subscribe to them.

              • @Touching_Grass
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                7 months ago

                I don’t want them to get paid. I want people like me who are so passionate about a thing that they make stuff for the community.

                What I don’t want are for those people to not bother creating things because the whole technology shifted towards profit motivations and the space and tech was taking over by the 1000th comedian who is leveraging a free advertising method to sell tickets and still ends up selling ad space like they’re a fender in NASCAR.

                And no ads are not all skippable. No they’re not short, they interrupt, they infiltrate every corner of our lives and podcasts were popular early on because they were the exact opposite of what they are now. Now its just radio 2.0.