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The Speakularity, Where Everything You Say Is Transcribed and Searchable

An anonymous reader sends an article from Nautilus about the possible future of speech recognition software. Today, hundreds of millions of people are walking around with devices that can not only record sound, but also do a decent job of turning spoken word into searchable text. The article makes the case that the recording and transcription of normal conversation will become commonplace, sooner or later. Not only would this potentially make a lot more interesting discussion available beyond earshot, but it could also facilitate information retrieval on a personal level.

The article makes an analogy with email — right now, if you communicated with somebody through email a decade ago, you don't have to remember the specifics — as long as you didn't delete it or switch email providers, you can just search and look at exactly what was said. Of course, the power of such technology comes with trade-offs — not only would we be worried about the obvious privacy issues, but many people may feel restricted by always "performing" for the microphones. Some researchers also worry that if we have technology to remember for us, we'll put much less effort into remembering things ourselves.

10 of 74 comments (clear)

  1. Probably not by aaaaaaargh! · · Score: 2

    Not everything that is technically feasible becomes commonplace. Despite increasingly clever marketing creating artificial demands, people still tend to have their own mind.

    1. Re:Probably not by TWX · · Score: 2

      Thing of it is, it's not the phone that's interpreting the voice, it's servers at the other end of a long network connection that take the recorded sound bite and convert it into text.

      So no, right now it's not terribly feasible because there are not enough servers to handle more than specific requests.

      Besides, how narcissistic is it to document every moment, and who's going to want to review all of that? The only use that I see for such technology is to spy on everyone Stasi-style. Think of the scenario proposed in one of the Christian Bale Batman movies, but instead of the Caped Crusader only looking for keywords and discarding the rest, it would be the government archiving everything worse than the Telescreens did in 1984, to later review for precrime or thoughtcrime prosecution.

      No thanks.

      --
      Do not look into laser with remaining eye.
  2. Paging Tom Scott by anzha · · Score: 2

    haha. Wow. Tom Scott seems to have called it. Now all we need is Apple to come up with mini cameras in the earbuds.

    --
    Do you know why the road less traveled by is littered with the bones of the unwary?
  3. I never said that. by cygtoad · · Score: 2

    Looking forward to this tech evening up arguments with my wife.

    1. Re:I never said that. by Chrisq · · Score: 2

      Looking forward to this tech evening up arguments with my wife.

      Sometimes its not worth winning the argument. Even if you could prove that she said something different a smile and "well if that's what you think now then that's what counts" is a better approach

  4. We can also conceive of the SEEgularity by aynoknman · · Score: 2

    That's when the successors to Google glass not only deliver images to our eyes but also monitor them at the same time and record what we're looking at.

    --
    We need a "+1 -- nice sig" moderation.
  5. OK Google by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

    It sounds crazy but are we really that far behind with always listening devices? Imagine brand recognition or "need fulfillment" services pinging off everything you say

    "Man, it's hot out" translates into a device showing a Coke advert. I feel like this isn't far off

  6. Email archives by sgunhouse · · Score: 2

    I can't say I've looked at anything older than about 3 years, but I do have it going back > 10 years - even though I have changed ISPs 4 times.

  7. One less day by AndyKron · · Score: 2

    Tonight when I go to bed I will be thankful that there's one less day to live.

  8. Ah, the good ole days by gregor-e · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Nowadays we wring our hands and tsk-tsk the loss of old film reels, books, and magazines, fearing the loss of part of our culture. In the future, people will yearn for the golden days of yore, when an inappropriate remark might elicit a titter of embarrassed laughter before vanishing into the fog of entropy.