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https://amplify.nabshow.com/articles/are-voice-actors-about-to-be-replaced-by-machines/
Worries about digital actors replacing the real
thing remain on the horizon but closer to home synthetic voices are already
‘playing’ video-game characters, and acting corporate videos. Could they put
human voice talent out of a job?
As Karen Hao puts it in an article for MIT, “AI voices
are also cheap, scalable, and easy to work with.”
We’re all used to having Alexa and Siri or the
digital navigator in our cars talk to us. Often the dialogue is a little
clunky. Getting them to sound any more natural has been a laborious manual
task.
Advances in deep learning have changed that. “Voice
developers no longer needed to dictate the exact pacing, pronunciation, or
intonation of the generated speech,” says Hao. “Instead, they could feed a few
hours of audio into an algorithm and have the algorithm learn those patterns on
its own.”
A number of startups are leveraging this to create
artificial voice actors for hire.
Seatlle’s WellSaid Labs claims to create
voiceover “with AI voices indistinguishable from real ones”. It
invites you to audition different voices based on style, gender, and the type
of production you’re working on.
Capturing these nuances involves finding the right
voice actors to supply the appropriate training data and fine-tune the
deep-learning models. WellSaid tells MIT that the process requires at least an
hour or two of audio and a few weeks of labor to develop a realistic-sounding
synthetic replica.
It also points out that every voice on it platform
is built with the “written consent of the talent who lent us their voice to
create an AI likeness.” We will never clone someone’s voice without
their approval, WellSaid adds.
Sonantic.io makes voices for video-game characters.
“Reduce production timelines from months to minutes by rapidly transforming
scripts into audio,” it claims. Users can create “highly expressive, nuanced
performances” by “with full control over voice performance parameters.”
It is also at pains to point out the ethical use of
our technology. In accordance with the Ethics
Guidelines for Trustworthy AI, “we make sure our algorithms are never trained on
publicly available data without the voice owner’s permission.”
Unlike a recording of a human voice actor, AI voices
can also update their script in real time, opening up new opportunities to
personalize advertising.
VocaliD, builds custom voices that match a
company’s brand identity. “Brands have thought about their colors,” says Rupal
Patel, founder and CEO. “They’ve thought about their fonts. Now they’ve got to
start thinking about the way their voice sounds as well.”
Sonantic says many of its clients use the
synthesized voices only in pre-production and switch to real voice actors for
the final production. But it also says a few have started using them throughout
the process, perhaps for characters with fewer lines. Resemble.ai says it
has worked with film and TV producers to patch up actors’ performances when
words get garbled or mispronounced.
“Our characters are all about emotional
performance,” says Guy Gadney, CEO, Charisma AI, an interactive
storytelling platform. “Siri, Alexa and other voices are monotonous, but
Charisma characters come to life, get happy, sad, angry. Resemble’s
capabilities in this regard are awesome and their markup language gave us the
flexibility we needed to achieve our goals.”
Hao reports actors union SAG-AFTRA, expressing
concern some actors have grown increasingly worried about their livelihoods.
They’re worried about being compensated unfairly or losing control over their
voices, which constitute their brand and reputation.
This is now the subject of a lawsuit against
TikTok brought by the Canadian voice actor Bev Standing, who alleges that the
app’s built-in voice-over feature uses a synthetic copy of her voice without
her permission. .
Some companies are looking to be more accountable
in how they engage with the voice-acting industry. The best ones, says
SAG-AFTRA’s rep, have approached the union to figure out the best way to
compensate and respect voice actors for their work.
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