Chucking 8 years of work seems like a drastic step, especially since others were (and now have) surely developed similar algorithms and are a lot less scrupulous about how they train and use them. Why did you feel like you had to step away from the field altogether after such a big time investment? Not that I’m judging, I’m just curious at the motivations involved.
My original algorithms were specifically designed to help artists perform nearly perfect color matching, based largely on text inputs. It started off as a single purpose application, but totally human driven.
The more I used and tested my own software, it taught me more than I even expected to learn about photochromatic processing. More than I even designed it to do even.
I was already also studying acoustics around the same time. I saw how well my chromatography software was working, and just barely started adapting the algorithm to process acoustics.
I quickly realized that I didn’t have nearly enough RAM or processing power to do anything meaningful in any sensible timeframe, but I could already see that it was possible to go as far as changing one’s voice with the voice print of someone else.
I announced that with online friends at the time, around 2017, and nobody believed me. Probably because I couldn’t quite prove it yet. But I knew it.
The more I thought about that, the more I thought it would only contribute to fraud. So, I just fucking stopped, slammed on development brakes, and said fuckit.
I don’t want to be part of the problem, I just wanted to design a better color filter/processor system.
Fair enough, although I’m not sure why you turned a color filter/processor into something that could process acoustics if that’s all you wanted, but I get not wanting to be part of the problem.
Chucking 8 years of work seems like a drastic step, especially since others were (and now have) surely developed similar algorithms and are a lot less scrupulous about how they train and use them. Why did you feel like you had to step away from the field altogether after such a big time investment? Not that I’m judging, I’m just curious at the motivations involved.
My original algorithms were specifically designed to help artists perform nearly perfect color matching, based largely on text inputs. It started off as a single purpose application, but totally human driven.
The more I used and tested my own software, it taught me more than I even expected to learn about photochromatic processing. More than I even designed it to do even.
I was already also studying acoustics around the same time. I saw how well my chromatography software was working, and just barely started adapting the algorithm to process acoustics.
I quickly realized that I didn’t have nearly enough RAM or processing power to do anything meaningful in any sensible timeframe, but I could already see that it was possible to go as far as changing one’s voice with the voice print of someone else.
I announced that with online friends at the time, around 2017, and nobody believed me. Probably because I couldn’t quite prove it yet. But I knew it.
The more I thought about that, the more I thought it would only contribute to fraud. So, I just fucking stopped, slammed on development brakes, and said fuckit.
I don’t want to be part of the problem, I just wanted to design a better color filter/processor system.
Fair enough, although I’m not sure why you turned a color filter/processor into something that could process acoustics if that’s all you wanted, but I get not wanting to be part of the problem.
Like I said, I was also studying acoustics at the time, and also writing sound card drivers.
I probably have one of the longest open bug tickets ever for VirtualBox…
https://forums.virtualbox.org/viewtopic.php?t=12425