![]() (Confining it to the ghetto served as another way to paper-over the problem.) But joblessness is equal-opportunity now. It used to be mostly black communities that had these issues. The only other alternative is criminality and jail. Is it any wonder life expectancy has been decreasing for years in the US? It's from deaths of despair - suicides, drug overdoses. In the dystopic scenario, it will just be involuntary culling. Unless people voluntarily control their uteruses, population control measures are in the future too. It may vary country to country, although in light of globalism, a more global view is needed (and beyond the scope of this post.) If we've already hit the peak, then it'll be measured not in centuries, but in decades. It's hard to predict exactly when, due to the slow and gradual nature of the problem. The end-game, without any course correction, is the continuing decline of living standards into an eventual dystopic hellscape. Productive (in an economic sense) work is disappearing. They've been in decline for decades now in the US. Workforce participation rate has already peaked. In many countries, worker productivity has already peaked. Sequestering would-be (un)employees in forever-war meat grinders. Having "working age" start progressively later in life and end progressively earlier. We've come up with myriad clever arrangements to paper over or mitigate the issue, and they've worked, to an extent. The breaking point lies further still, though it's impossible to predict where exactly. It is a cumulative effect, which continues to accumulate. We have not been through this several times. "We look at this as a potentially great right of publicity case for this voice professional whose voice is being used in a commercial manner without her consent." "We look to make sure that state rights of publicity are as strong as they can be, that any limitations on people being able to protect their image and voice are very narrowly drawn on first amendment lines," Jeffrey Bennett, a general counsel for SAG-AFTRA, told Motherboard. In November 2020, New York became the first state to apply this right to digital replicas after years of advocacy from SAG-AFTRA, a performers' union. Standing's lawsuit invokes her right of publicity, which grants individuals the right to control commercial uses of their likeness, including their voice. Laws protecting individuals from unauthorized clones of their voices are also in their infancy. Brands advertising on TikTok also had the text-to-speech voice at their disposal, meaning her voice could be used for explicitly commercial purposes. Her lawsuit claims TikTok did not pay or notify her to use her likeness for its text-to-speech feature, and that some videos using it voiced "foul and offensive language" causing "irreparable harm" to her reputation. Standing's case materializes some performers' worst fears about the control this technology gives companies over their voices. Standing's supporters say the TikTok lawsuit is not just about Standing's voice - it's about the future of an entire industry attempting to adapt to new advancements in the field of machine learning. Rallying behind Standing, voice actors donated to a GoFundMe that has raised nearly $7,000 towards her legal expenses and posted TikTok videos under the #StandingWithBev hashtag warning users about the feature. She was paid for the initial recording session but not for being Siri. ![]() This is not the first case like this voice actress Susan Bennett discovered that audio she recorded for another company was repurposed to be the voice of Siri after Apple launched the feature in 2011. ![]() But for the voice actors whose recordings form the foundation of text-to-speech (TTS) voices, this technology threatens to disrupt their livelihoods, raising questions about fair compensation and human agency in the age of AI.Īt the center of this reckoning is voice actress Bev Standing, who is suing TikTok after alleging the company used her voice for its text-to-speech feature without compensation or consent. For tech companies, the ability to generate any sentence with a realistic-sounding human voice is an exciting, cost-saving frontier. ![]() Using machine learning, voice AI companies like VocaliD can create synthetic voices from a person's recorded speech - adopting unique qualities like speaking rhythm, pronunciation of consonants and vowels, and intonation. An anonymous reader quotes a report from Motherboard: With only 30 minutes of audio, companies can now create a digital clone of your voice and make it say words you never said. ![]()
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