It's frustrating when you're not understood — especially when you're trying to speak to Siri, Alexa, or another internet-connected device.
Voice datasets that power voice recognition services are owned by a handful of major companies, and they can wildly underrepresent the voices of non-dominant accents, Black, Indigenous, and other people of color, disabled people and gender marginalised people. In fact, for people speaking other global languages - there may be no datasets at all.
That’s why Mozilla launched Common Voice — the world's largest public voice database, powered by the voices of volunteer contributors. Our goal is to teach machines how real people speak.
Today, we’re asking you to contribute to Common Voice, but we want you to choose how you’ll do it. Will you donate your voice to one of our Common Voice language datasets? Or will you make a $34 donation to Mozilla to support projects like this to reclaim the internet? (Or both!)
I'd be curious about the privacy concerns, but this might help a lot with underrepresented voice data. It might come down to if someone wants more datasets for their particular voice/language more than the other concerns.
If your language/accent is already well documented, it might not help as much?
Mozilla: "We'd like to build a dataset of underrepresented languages and accents so that voice recognition works for everyone. It'll be under an open license."
Most of this thread: "GIVE ME MONEY."
Sigh. As soon as it turned out that AI training data was "worth something" everyone turned into a money-grubbing mercenary.
I'm not sure why there is so much anti-Mozilla hate. I know they're far from perfect but they do an awful lot for the open source world. Having an open database for voice training seems like something that the world can use to do some good.
Because everyone knows better how to do open source, and these ppl are usually right ideally, but when you apply some concepts you can starve to death. Much of what mozilla does are not ideal, but are very good, and the only option of things we need today, not in 20-30 years.
But when I donate my voice, it's not going to some vault at Mozilla. It becomes part of an open resource that anyone can use to build models, libraries, etc.
Just because it is organized by a company that may or may not have nefarious goals, isn't that still a good thing to exist?
Let me completely exaggerate to illustrate the concept:
If osama bin laden or hitler, mao, a terrorist org etc. start a charity to plant more trees you would feel uncomfortable planting trees for their charity.
If I don't fully trust a company, it discourages me from participating in anything they do, no matter the intention.