Current location:Cultural Current news portal > business
OpenAI pauses ChatGPT voice after Scarlett Johansson comparisons
Cultural Current news portal2024-05-21 08:01:11【business】1People have gathered around
IntroductionNEW YORK (AP) — OpenAI says it plans to halt the use of one of its ChatGPT voices after some users s
NEW YORK (AP) — OpenAI says it plans to halt the use of one of its ChatGPT voices after some users said it sounded like Scarlett Johansson, who famously voiced a fictional, and at the time futuristic, AI assistant in the 2013 film “Her.”
In a post on the social media platform X Monday, OpenAI said it is “working to pause” Sky — the name of one of five voices that ChatGPT users can chose to speak with. The company said it had “heard questions” about how it selects the lifelike audio options available for its flagship artificial intelligence chatbot, particularly Sky, and wanted to address them.
OpenAI was also quick to debunk the internet’s theories about Johansson in an accompanying blog post detailing how ChatGPT’s voices were chosen.
“We believe that AI voices should not deliberately mimic a celebrity’s distinctive voice — Sky’s voice is not an imitation of Scarlett Johansson but belongs to a different professional actress using her own natural speaking voice,” the company wrote. It said it could not share the name of its voice actors for privacy reasons.
Address of this article:http://saintkittsandnevis.gigirondeau.com/article-09a799223.html
Very good!(958)
Related articles
- Six killed in a 'foiled coup' in Congo, the army says
- Pope skips Good Friday procession 'to preserve his health'
- HK gov't declines to say how much funding it gave for 'Chubby Hearts'
- Gazans return to scenes of devastation in Khan Younis
- Shooting injures 2 at Missouri high school graduation ceremony
- HKFP Lens: Hong Kong marks China's National Day with displays of patriotism, pyrotechnics
- Ukraine's Zelensky warns of dwindling air defence missiles
- Biden administration imposes first
- Inquiry slams UK authorities for failures that killed thousands in infected blood scandal
- Builders hope Resource Management Act change will speed up papakāinga developments
Popular articles
Recommended
Siblings trying to make US water polo teams for Paris Olympics
US Treasury Secretary explains her 'magic mushroom' experience in China
Teenagers named as victims of Nelson off
'Hardest Geezer' Russell Cook completes almost year
Analysis: Larson enters conversation with Verstappen as best drivers in the world
Indigenous deaths in custody haunt Australia
Russia sentences Pussy Riot activist to six years in absentia for Ukraine "war fakes"
Titanic 'door' prop that kept Rose alive sells for more than $1m
Links
- As syphilis cases among US newborns soar, doctors group advises more screening during pregnancy
- Junta attacks in Myanmar’s Bago region kill 8, displace 6,000 — Radio Free Asia
- Minnesota State Sen. Nicole Mitchell charged with first
- I've lived in a bus stop for seven months
- Police find body of missing Maine man believed killed after a search that took nearly a year
- Former school cop Elias Huizar 'shoots dead' teacher ex
- Teresa Giudice, 51, of RHONJ poses with her mini
- I've lived in a bus stop for seven months
- Starbucks vs federal labor agency: U.S. Supreme Court is set to hear oral arguments
- Armenia and Azerbaijan move closer to normalizing ties as the first border marker goes up