YouTube Has 1 Billion Videos With Closed-Captioning (But Not All of Them Are Accurate) (variety.com) 52
Over a billion videos on YouTube are accessible to viewers with difficulties in hearing, thanks to the video giant's automated captions, it said Thursday. From a report on Variety: That certainly sounds impressive -- except when you realize that many of the site's automatically generated captions aren't completely right. The Google-owned video giant first launched captions back in 2006, and three years later introduced automatic speech recognition to add closed-captioning to YouTube content. Today, YouTube users watch video with auto-generated captions more than 15 million times per day. But the system is prone to errors. For example, the trailer for Amazon Studio's Oscar-nominated "Manchester by the Sea" (at this link) includes numerous inaccuracies in the auto-transcribed captions, sometimes to hilarious -- not to mention frustrating -- effect.
So we're talking Auto Generated Bad Lip Reading? (Score:3)
I know robots are taking over jobs. But put those two statements together and this sounds like auto-generated bad lip reading.
Now if someone could only implement all possible bad lip readings, and then auto-rate them for hilarity, we would be onto something.
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Re:So we're talking Auto Generated Bad Lip Reading (Score:4, Informative)
But I did read, that it *IS* very much worth your while to put accurate CC on your videos, as that it supposedly highly figures into your Google rankings.
I found that after I transcribed my videos, my rankings did shoot up higher on plain old Google searches and I think also on YouTube suggestions, etc.....so, looks to be worthwhile to do if you want max hits.
Re:Lip Reading? (Score:1)
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Why bad lip reading? Why not your basic garden variety bad speech recognition?
https://www.youtube.com/user/BadLipReading
I've noticed a lot of errors in 'Downfall' (Score:2, Insightful)
Something is clearly wrong with the translations of the Downfall [youtube.com] videos. Sometimes it's about SAP, sometimes it's about the World Cup, but my limited German tells me it's about the fall of the Third Reich.
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Something is clearly wrong with the translations of the Downfall videos. Sometimes it's about SAP, sometimes it's about the World Cup, but my limited German tells me it's about the fall of the Third Reich.
We're living in the postmodern era. The interpretation is left up to the viewer!
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Bad closed captions allowed me to grasp the idea of most scenes of a picture I wanted to watch.
When I'm watching something in a language I don't understand, inaccurate CCs are nearly as good as accurate ones, as I have no idea that they don't match up. I prefer the original language with subtitles because the dubbed audio lacks the actors' inflections plus I don't like it when lips and words don't match. I often watch movies or TV programs with subtitles on, but avoid automated CC - When my eyes and ears don't match the conflict distracts me.
...the movie keeps playing and you get to understand who is the hero and who's the villain, at least.
I can typically do that with the film muted, can't you?
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Goes for comments too... (Score:2)
site's automatically generated captions aren't completely right
Maybe they are generating the comments as well
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So by all means, continue doing CC.
Good enough for me. (Score:1)
But not all of them are accurate (Score:1)
Task one undergarment.
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Aw, Yorb aces Arbee long "2S".
about as good as google search. (Score:3)
I recently watched a video with closed captioning on.
'stan fortuna school of the eucharist'
lets just say google search doesn't think eucharist is a common term and has an especially hard time with it when it is a quickly spoken rap song with a Hispanic accent.
It was pretty funny what they translated it too.
It did leave me wondering if there should be a mechanism to tell them the words are wrong and really wrong.
Crowd sourced option (Score:2)
Well you would choose Manchester By the Sea (Score:2)
I grew up in Boston, and when I go back to the old neighborhood it makes me wonder how people understand me at all. Speech recognition programs never work for me.
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Don't worry. You are a special, unique snowflake. If people can't understand you, they are racist.
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Don't worry. You are a special, unique snowflake. If people can't understand you, they are racist.
Actually people who don't understand me are usually idiots. Some of them are blockheads. Funnily enough racists understand me fine, they just don't like what I have to say.
couple of things (Score:2)
I've lost the link, but someone recently mentioned an intentionally humorous duo who:
1) write a skit, perform it, and upload to Google
2) let captioning take its best stab
3) use the captioning as a new script, and re-record the scene
4) upload and re-caption
5) record a third time, with even weirder dialogue
Then they splice it all together, and you get to watch the degeneration of language as iterative captioning makes everything nonsensical.
My wife and I also tend to watch a lot of TV when the other wants qui
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I wonder... (Score:2)
From my personal experience, I can't help but wonder if there is even ONE out of all the auto-generated captions that is accurate at all. :P
Have you guys ever seen one? I mean, a few mistakes are ok... but so far I haven't seen any video that had auto-generated captions that was even understandable at all. More like a mish mash of guesses.
Which is great for comedic effect I guess, but not so much for viewers with difficulties in hearing.
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I dunno I use the auto CC all the time. Some of the guesses are terrible but normally seems to have the biggest issues around random nouns. So assuming that I know what the topic of the video is I can use the CC, I just have to substitute the proper noun at the right time.
I tend to use it when watching a technical video with a single talker and I don't actually want the sound on for what ever reason.
Accuracy? (Score:2)
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I really don't think this thing is using lip reading ( I could be wrong does anyone have a source). I'd guess it is using the same servers as google voice search and the type of errors it has seems consistent with that.
Not accurate (Score:2)
Make perfect the enemy of good. (Score:3)
Perfection is the goal. But doing better than current version is the shipping criterion.
Auto captioning is better than no captioning for hearing impaired.
And human captioning is not perfect. I remember watching Lion King with closed captioning turned on and they had missed a crucial "o" in some dialog that had the word "count".
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Not all are accurate (Score:2)
Not always a bad thing.
Bad Lip Reading are far more entertaining than the actual text of the presidential debates, for example.
yeah (Score:2)
But Not All of Them Are Accurate (Score:2)
Are any of them accurate? Can you manually enter captions?
Undertake this discourse, actually types. [youtube.com]
Youtube has a potty mouth (Score:4, Informative)
Can't transcribe a Boston accent (Score:2)
Clearly, these algorithms don't know what a bubblah or a blinkah or a clickah is.