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by Mordisquitos
569 days ago
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I would argue that being able to see the drawbacks and potential negative externalities of a new technology is not a sign of a "limited imagination", but quite the contrary. An actual display of a limited imagination is the inability to imagine how a new technology can (and will) be abused in society by bad actors. |
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As for positive applications, some I see:
* Allowing those with speech impairments to communicate using their natural voice again
* Allowing those uncomfortable with their natural voice, such as transgender people, to communicate closer to how they wish to be perceived
* Translation of a user's voice, maintaining emotion and intonation, for natural cross-language communication on calls
* Professional-quality audio from cheap microphone setups (for video tutorials, indie games, etc.)
* Doing character voices for a D&D session, audiobook, etc.
* Customization of voice assistants, such as to use a native accent/dialect
* Movies, podcasts, audiobooks, news broadcasts, etc. made available in a huge range of languages
* If integrated with something like airpods, babelfish-like automatic isolation and translation of any speech around you
* Privacy from being able to communicate online or record videos without revealing your real voice, which I think is why many (myself included) currently resort to text-only
* New forms of interactive media - customised movies, audio dramas where the listener plays a role, videogame NPCs that react with more than just prerecorded lines, etc.
* And of course: memes, satire, and parody
I appreciate HN's general view on technologies like encrypted messaging - not falling into "we need to ban this now because pedophiles could use it" hysteria. But for anything involving machine learning, I'm concerned how often the hacker mentality seems to go out the window and we instead get people advocating for it to be made illegal to host the code, for instance.