Since we first announced captions in Google Video and YouTube, we've introduced multiple caption tracks, improved search functionality and even automatic translation. Each of these features has had great personal significance to me, not only because I helped to design them, but also because I'm deaf. Today, I'm in Washington, D.C. to announce what I consider the most important and exciting milestone yet: machine-generated automatic captions.
Since the original launch of captions in our products, we’ve been happy to see growth in the number of captioned videos on our services, which now number in the hundreds of thousands. This suggests that more and more people are becoming aware of how useful captions can be. As we’ve explained in the past, captions not only help the deaf and hearing impaired, but with machine translation, they also enable people around the world to access video content in any of 51 languages. Captions can also improve search and even enable users to jump to the exact parts of the videos they're looking for.
However, like everything YouTube does, captions face a tremendous challenge of scale. Every minute, 20 hours of video are uploaded. How can we expect every video owner to spend the time and effort necessary to add captions to their videos? Even with all of the captioning support already available on YouTube, the majority of user-generated video content online is still inaccessible to people like me.
To help address this challenge, we've combined Google's automatic speech recognition (ASR) technology with the YouTube caption system to offer automatic captions, or auto-caps for short. Auto-caps use the same voice recognition algorithms in Google Voice to automatically generate captions for video. The captions will not always be perfect (check out the video below for an amusing example), but even when they're off, they can still be helpful—and the technology will continue to improve with time.
In addition to automatic captions, we’re also launching automatic caption timing, or auto-timing, to make it significantly easier to create captions manually. With auto-timing, you no longer need to have special expertise to create your own captions in YouTube. All you need to do is create a simple text file with all the words in the video and we’ll use Google’s ASR technology to figure out when the words are spoken and create captions for your video. This should significantly lower the barriers for video owners who want to add captions, but who don’t have the time or resources to create professional caption tracks.
To learn more about how to use auto-caps and auto-timing, check out this short video and our help center article:
You should see both features available in English by the end of the week. For our initial launch, auto-caps are only visible on a handful of partner channels (list below*). Because auto-caps are not perfect, we want to make sure we get feedback from both viewers and video owners before we roll them out more broadly. Auto-timing, on the other hand, is rolling out globally for all English-language videos on YouTube. We hope to expand these features for other channels and languages in the future. Please send us your feedback to help make that happen.
Today I'm more hopeful than ever that we'll achieve our long-term goal of making videos universally accessible. Even with its flaws, I see the addition of automatic captioning as a huge step forward.
* Partners for the initial launch of auto-caps: UC Berkeley, Stanford, MIT, Yale, UCLA, Duke, UCTV, Columbia, PBS, National Geographic, Demand Media, UNSW and most Google & YouTube channels.
Update on 11/24: We've posted a full length video of our announcement event in Washington D.C. on YouTube. We've included English captions using our new auto-timing feature.
Kamis, 19 November 2009
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2009
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November
- We’re Going (RED) for World AIDS Day
- Holiday savings with Checkout
- This week in search 11/27/09
- The new Black (Friday)
- Iraqi Government on YouTube
- New search ad formats
- Easy holiday shopping with Google Product Search
- Displaying the best display ad with Teracent
- This week in search 11/20/09
- Google Apps highlights – 11/20/2009
- Cool. Even Batman uses Google.
- Releasing the Chromium OS open source project
- Automatic captions in YouTube
- What's cooking with iGoogle...
- Explore images with Google Image Swirl, now in Labs
- Finding the laws that govern us
- New site hierarchies display in search results
- Connecting citizens and journalists with YouTube D...
- Templates now available in Google Sites
- And the Google Code Jam 2009 champion is...
- A new look for Google Translate
- This week in search 11/13/09
- Introducing the Europe Scholarship for Students wi...
- Google Sidewiki: The first 50 days of valuable ent...
- Gone Google at EDUCAUSE 2009
- Google's movie showtimes, digitally remastered
- Googlers receive prestigious ITOJUN Service Award
- Commemorating Veterans Day at Google
- World Bank public data, now in search
- Locking SafeSearch
- Twice the storage for a quarter of the price
- Finding flu vaccine information in one easy place
- A WiFi wonderland in the sky... and on the ground!
- Happy 40th birthday Sesame Street!
- Fifty states of Street View
- Investing in a mobile future with AdMob
- Google Apps highlights 11/6/2009
- This week in search 11/6/09
- Even more music for you to find with Google search
- Transparency, choice and control — now complete wi...
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- Google Friend Connect, now more personalized
- A la peanut butter sandwiches!
- Cutting back on your long list of passwords
- Investing in innovation at Google
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