Audio AIs are trained on data full of bias and offensive language

You May Be Interested In:‘We got stuck in puddles’: skiers upset by lack of snow on Swedish slopes


Audio training data has been overlooked when it comes to assessing AI

Israel Palacio/Unsplash

Artificial intelligence models that generate audio are being trained on datasets plagued with bias, offensive language and potential copyright infringement, sparking concerns about their use.

Generative audio products, such as song generators, voice cloning tools and transcription services, are increasingly popular, but while text and image generators have been subject to much scrutiny, audio has received less attention.

To help rectify this, William Agnew at Carnegie Mellon University in Pennsylvania and his…

share Paylaş facebook pinterest whatsapp x print

Similar Content

Stylized illustration of a hooded figure at a laptop.
Men accused of DDoSing some of the world’s biggest tech companies
Raspberry Pi 500 makes an 8GB Pi 5 into a compact, inexpensive desktop PC
Raspberry Pi 500 makes an 8GB Pi 5 into a compact, inexpensive desktop PC
Attackers exploit critical Zimbra vulnerability using cc’d email addresses
Critical WordPress plugin vulnerability under active exploit threatens thousands
iRobot Roomba Combo 505, up against some toys it is avoiding using lidar scanning.
iRobot says there is “substantial doubt” about it as a “going concern”
A still frame of an example AI-generated mushroom people video created by OpenAI's Sora.
Ten months after first tease, OpenAI launches Sora video generation publicly
There’s a new benchmark in town for measuring performance on Windows 95 PCs
There’s a new benchmark in town for measuring performance on Windows 95 PCs
The News Spectrum | © 2024 | News