BOSSES at internet giant YouTube last night admitted its video subtitles are translating Scots into GIBBERISH.
The file-sharing site’s automatic caption service has been bamboozled as it tries to interpret the twang of stars like footie’s Sir Alex Ferguson and funnyman Kevin Bridges.
In one clip, the machine-generated text shows First Minister Alex Salmond calling his deputy Nicola Sturgeon “Necklace Thompson”.
And a routine by comedy legend Billy Connolly, changes Pollokshaws, in Glasgow, to “pork choice”.
Last night, a YouTube spokesman admitted: “Auto-captions work best for clearly spoken American English. Different dialects present interesting challenges that we’re working to address.”
But Paul Redfern, of the British Deaf Association, said: “It’s symptomatic of a larger problem. Lots of internet services are not accessible to deaf people.” Read more.
See: The Scottish Sun
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Comments about this article
Local time: 23:59
итальянский => английский
Hmm. The definition of dialects is always contentious, but isn’t even the idea of a uniform "American English" somewhat problematic?
Франция
Local time: 23:59
французский => английский
The name of the district in question could have given rise to something much more likely to raise a laugh surely!
Испания
Local time: 23:59
испанский => английский
+ ...
Er... "machine-generated text "... I rest my case, m'lud.
I already have enough trouble myself getting Dragon to recognise my Scots vowels and confusing things like "found/phoned" and "or/are"...
[Edited at 2013-03-12 10:18 GMT]
Португалия
Local time: 22:59
португальский => английский
+ ...
...this wonderful youtube video: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5FFRoYhTJQQ
Канада
Local time: 17:59
английский
+ ...
Their automatic English subtitles are often very wrong. Of course it can’t get Scots…
Великобритания
Local time: 22:59
французский => английский
+ ...
...this wonderful youtube video: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5FFRoYhTJQQ
...not viewable in England (Scotland too?)
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