The fork was created when Audacity was bought and one of the first things the new developers were about to do was add opt-out telemetry. People didn’t like that at all. From what I read in this thread, they ended up adding opt-in telemetry instead.
CaptainBasculin@lemmy.ml
on 13 Feb 2024 21:54
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That fork is sneedacity, which is very dead.
Sneptaur@pawb.social
on 13 Feb 2024 23:13
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Gotcha, thank you for the info. Gotta admit their made-up words are pretty funny
9point6@lemmy.world
on 13 Feb 2024 18:37
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AI models are often multiple gigabytes, tbh it’s a good sign that it’s not “AI” marketing bullshit (less of a risk with open source projects anyway). I’m pretty wary of “AI” audio software that’s only a few megabytes.
Neato@ttrpg.network
on 13 Feb 2024 18:52
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Why are they that big? Is it more than code? How could you get to gigabytes of code?
Aatube@kbin.social
on 13 Feb 2024 18:58
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It's basically a huge graph/flowchart.
acockworkorange@mander.xyz
on 13 Feb 2024 23:13
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Specifying weights, biases and shape definitely makes a graph.
IMO having a lot of more preferred and more deprecated routes is quite close to a flowchart except there's a lot more routes. The principles of how these work is quite similar.
General_Effort@lemmy.world
on 14 Feb 2024 13:04
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There are graph neural networks (meaning NNs that work on graphs), but I don’t think that’s what is used here.
I do not understand what you mean by “routes”. I suspect that you have misunderstood something fundamental.
I'm not talking about that. What's weights, biases and shape if not a graph?
By routes, I mean that the path of the graph doesn't necessarily converge and that it is often more tree-like.
General_Effort@lemmy.world
on 14 Feb 2024 14:36
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You can see a neural net as a graph in that the neurons are connected nodes. I don’t believe that graph theory is very helpful, though. The weights are parameters in a system of linear equations; the numbers in a matrix/tensor. That’s not how the term is used in graph theory, AFAIK.
ETA: What you say about “routes” (=paths?) is something that I can only make sense of, if I assume that you misunderstood something. Else, I simply don’t know what that is talking about.
If you look at the nodes which are most likely to trigger from given inputs then you can draw paths
General_Effort@lemmy.world
on 15 Feb 2024 11:45
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I still don’t know what this is supposed to mean for neural nets. I think it reflects a misunderstanding.
9point6@lemmy.world
on 13 Feb 2024 19:05
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The current wave of AI is around Large Language Models or LLMs. These are basically the result of a metric fuckton of calculation results generated from running a load of input data in, in different ways. Given these are often the result of things like text, pictures or audio that have been distilled down into numbers, you can imagine we’re talking a lot of data.
(This is massively simplified, by someone who doesn’t entirely understand it themselves)
They’re composed of many big matrices, which scale quadratically in size. A 32x32 matrix is 4x the size of a 16x16 matrix.
General_Effort@lemmy.world
on 13 Feb 2024 19:53
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Currently, AI means Artificial Neural Network (ANN). That’s only one specific approach. What ANN boils down to is one huge system of equations.
The file stores the parameters of these equations. It’s what’s called a matrix in math. A parameter is simply a number by which something is multiplied. Colloquially, such a file of parameters is called an AI model.
2 GB is probably an AI model with 1 billion parameters with 16 bit precision. Precision is how many digits you have. The more digits you have, the more precise you can give a value.
When people talk about training an AI, they mean finding the right parameters, so that the equations compute the right thing. The bigger the model, the smarter it can be.
Does that answer the question? It’s probably missing a lot.
interdimensionalmeme@lemmy.ml
on 14 Feb 2024 02:43
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Tensorflowlite models are tiny, but they’re potentially as much an audio revolution as synthetizer were in the 70s.
It’s hard to tell if that’s what we’re looking at here.
2gb is pretty normal for an AI model. I have some small LLM models on my PC and they’re about 7-10gb big. The big ones take up even more space.
vosagoy@futurology.today
on 13 Feb 2024 17:30
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Into the trash it goes
Terminarchs@slrpnk.net
on 13 Feb 2024 17:34
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Why is that?
vosagoy@futurology.today
on 13 Feb 2024 17:40
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Open source projects are now catching up to the AI buzzword. I wonder who could be behind this.
Sneptaur@pawb.social
on 13 Feb 2024 17:56
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AI, like cloud computing, is just a layman’s term for something else. You will not be able to stem the tide of language changing. It just means machine learning now. Just like how cloud computing is just a term for computing in a k8s cluster in someone’s data center.
General_Effort@lemmy.world
on 13 Feb 2024 20:13
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Neural nets have been a part of AI ever since the term was coined 70 years ago. The one thing one could complain about is that the term may be narrowing to that specific approach.
Strictly, neural nets are a specific kind of ML and ML is a specific kind of AI. The term AI seems to have gone out of fashion in academia, though.
Sneptaur@pawb.social
on 13 Feb 2024 20:14
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I never understood the opposition to anonymized telemetry. While adding an entire network stack for it is certainly quite atrocious, there's no problem with the principle I can see.
Bizarroland@kbin.social
on 13 Feb 2024 20:23
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Some people prefer to not have their every action watched and observed by some anonymous Big brother.
The people who do not get that are the people who profit from the watching, and the people that are, best case, inconsiderate of the desires and feelings of other people.
It is not normal nor is it natural to claim ownership of other people's activity.
It is normal and natural to wish to exist without being observed. Privacy is a fundamental human right and companies are taking advantage of the fact that it is not legally enforced.
Hopefully the laws will catch up and make it so that each and every individual opportunity to directly observe a person must be explicitly approved beforehand with a set time limit on the observation, and that all telemetry must be made publically available and transparent, not only during the original acquisition of data but also in each and every single usage of that data after the fact.
It is only fair after all that should accompany wish to observe you that they must also be equally observed.
Aatube@kbin.social
on 13 Feb 2024 22:40
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But if you anonymize the data, does it really mean someone has their every action watched in a harmful way?
EmilyIsTrans@lemmy.blahaj.zone
on 14 Feb 2024 01:19
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This is an odd place to grand stand. I’m glad you have ideals, but the fact is Audacity was looking to gather industry standard telemetry data (basic system information and crashes) as an opt-in system. This information is extremely important in fixing bugs and prioritising developer resources.
Bizarroland@kbin.social
on 14 Feb 2024 20:39
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And I could see the forest a whole lot better if all these trees weren't in the way.
It's not that one person is doing it it's that everyone is doing it.
The only way to stop everyone from doing it is to stop everyone from doing it.
EmilyIsTrans@lemmy.blahaj.zone
on 14 Feb 2024 23:15
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It’s pretty clear from my argument that I believe that it is entirely legitimate and unproblematic for everyone to collect basic data like system information and crashes. I’m not making an exception for Audacity, I’m broadly accepting this behaviour.
vosagoy@futurology.today
on 14 Feb 2024 05:08
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The music separation and speech transcription plug-ins actually sound nice. Obviously that will depend on how reliable they actually are.
ChunkMcHorkle@lemmy.world
on 14 Feb 2024 02:57
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I just tried the OpenVINO transcription on a random speech-over-music mp3 I happened to have: it works great, FAR better quality than I expected (I think I was expecting Youtube quality, but this is much cleaner and clearer). Perfect capitalization, good sentence breaks, adequate punctuation (commas, periods, question marks).
Only problem is that I can’t figure out how to copy the transcription so I can paste it outside Audacity: the transcriptions show up attached to specific portions of sound, like track labels. While it will save me the trouble of having to actually transcribe audio manually, to get them out of Audacity and into a word processor it looks like I may still be stuck copying each “label” individually unless I can find a way to copy or export them.
EDITED TO ADD: I just answered my own question, lol. File -> Export Other -> Export Labels -> .txt file
Sunforged@lemmy.ml
on 13 Feb 2024 17:40
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Audacity just doesn’t seem worth the trouble after discovering Reaper and how powerful it is for only $60.
ReallyActuallyFrankenstein@lemmynsfw.com
on 13 Feb 2024 18:09
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Does Reaper have similar AI tools? Not a dig, a real question.
Takapapatapaka@lemmy.world
on 13 Feb 2024 21:12
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Not at the moment, from what I know
Takapapatapaka@lemmy.world
on 13 Feb 2024 21:15
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I see what you mean, in your case as well as mine, Reaper is far more powerful and so far more adequate to our needs
But people do not always search for powerful software. Sometimes they only want something easy to learn, with only basic tasks but well performed and entirely free. When you have these requirements, Audacity is better
Audacity is a great learning tool for intro absolutely! When you’re just dipping your toes into recording and editing, free and $60 is a huge difference.
I feel like users that are going to be using any of the features of this plug-in, they’re probably at the point that going to Reaper makes sense.
OpenHammer6677@lemmy.world
on 13 Feb 2024 23:51
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I’m a sound engineer and I use different DAWs for different purposes. There’s just no one DAW that does all, so this is a compromise I’m happy to go with.
When I do podcast editing, I use Audacity to split multi-track WAV files and for truncating silence. It’s just waaaay easier to do this there than on Reaper. Plus it has a loopback recording feature built-in which I use for Zoom meeting recordings etc.
I use Pro Tools for audio post, but for most of what I do I’m a Reaper guy. It’s very powerful as you said and it just works.
I know it can be a hassle switching DAWs (muscle memory on shortcuts can get weird), but for me, I like making the most of the strengths of a tool rather than forcing something to do everything.
I learned DAWs with ProTools back around 2006 in college. Dropped out because I didn’t want to enter a competitive trade where my best opportunities were moving out of state.
Got sucked into another industry and haven’t touched much audio for the past decade. Getting back into it now and started on Audacity but the 2021 buyout had me confused where to land with the Tenacity split. the good/bad of open source I suppose but as a user being in the middle of a split was frustrating and detracting from recording. Finding out about Reaper and talking to people leaving ProTools behind even within the industry was just what I needed when I needed it.
My daughter (11yo) is now getting into DAWs as her current goal is to score an internship at KEXP, being able to share with her all the stuff I learned in school has been so much fun.
homoludens@feddit.de
on 13 Feb 2024 17:53
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Windows only :(
Limonene@lemmy.world
on 13 Feb 2024 18:31
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According to the repo, it builds fine on Linux. They just don’t distribute a binary for it.
after looking into it:
it’s not and it never was.
a) it’s open source, so nobody’s putting that shit in there without getting caught
b) it had an opt-in error reporting feature that would send data back… that was the entire thing…
drislands@lemmy.world
on 14 Feb 2024 02:45
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What? You must be joking. Really? The entire thing was about opt-in error reporting?
i’ve used it forever with a very restrictive firewall and i’ve never seen it do anything unexpected… or any phoning home at all…
eager_eagle@lemmy.world
on 14 Feb 2024 05:33
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Not really that simple, it was an apparent change to the privacy policy that vaguely anticipated collection of arbitrary user data, which shook the confidence of the open source community on the project. The fact this happened right after audacity was sold was the cherry on top.
doctorcrimson@lemmy.world
on 14 Feb 2024 06:54
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Were they reverted? I’ll have to check later, but an official statement from Muse Group stated they provided the data they collected to third parties so idk. If the telemetry is still there then I’m not downloading it, Open Source projects generally don’t need telemetry to begin with.
doctorcrimson@lemmy.world
on 14 Feb 2024 06:52
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in 2021 Audacity was acquired by a company called MuseGroup who added unnecessary telemetry and they admit that they do provide the data the collect to third parties. It’s spyware as far as I’m concerned.
StereoTrespasser@lemmy.world
on 14 Feb 2024 11:16
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If opt-in telemetry is spyware then the FOSS community truly is off the rails.
doctorcrimson@lemmy.world
on 14 Feb 2024 21:09
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If it was truly opt in, then why did the community feel the need to create forks removing the telemetry? Plus, a lot of FOSS don’t need telemetry to start with. They get tons of voluntary high quality feedback without automated collection.
Klear@sh.itjust.works
on 14 Feb 2024 21:26
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I’ve read this exact or very similar comment from you for the fourth time at least. You’re a spambot as far as I’m concerned.
doctorcrimson@lemmy.world
on 14 Feb 2024 21:35
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Lmao
Pot says the Kettle exagerates.
doctorcrimson@lemmy.world
on 14 Feb 2024 06:51
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That’s not entirely true, Audacity was acquired by a company called MuseGroup who added unnecessary telemetry and they admit that they do provide the data the collect to third parties. It’s spyware as far as I’m concerned.
Point a has always me me wonder, is that accurate? Are there actually people going through the code to make sure open source isn’t malicious? I can barely read my coworkers code… Let alone a strangers.
people are definitely going through the code on a project as popular as audacity…
less well known stuff is much less scrutinized, of course
aidan@lemmy.world
on 14 Feb 2024 20:54
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Its way less work than going through the code to check for telemetry unless it is an intentionally hidden attack- just use Wireshark and check if there is network traffic other than checking for an update on program start.
lemmeee@sh.itjust.works
on 14 Feb 2024 23:45
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If a project is popular people will make changes to it every day. But you can look at the repo and judge for yourself.
InfiniWheel@lemmy.one
on 13 Feb 2024 20:30
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It was a pull request to add opt-out analytics that got blown out of proportion, where the real issue was the EULA and how tonedeaf of a move it was considering the community around Audacity. IIRC, they ended up replacing it with opt-in analytics.
AcidOctopus@lemmy.ml
on 13 Feb 2024 19:11
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I’m sure I used to use Audacity back in the day as a free, quick and dirty editor to splice up audio tracks. I’m talking at least 10 years ago.
Had no idea it was still even a thing.
Theharpyeagle@lemmy.world
on 13 Feb 2024 20:33
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It’s honestly pretty much the industry standard for indie creators. There’s nothing super flashy about it, it just does its job very well.
This along with 7-zip and OBS and the like have been pretty impressive success stories for FOSS, even if most of their users don’t even know what that means.
doctorcrimson@lemmy.world
on 14 Feb 2024 06:58
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They got acquired in 2021 so a lot of people have been very skeptical about it lately.
Zoomboingding@lemmy.world
on 13 Feb 2024 20:53
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Awesome, useful features if they work well. I’ll have to try it out.
peopleproblems@lemmy.world
on 13 Feb 2024 20:58
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Oh boy this is what I always wanted woooo
Agent641@lemmy.world
on 14 Feb 2024 00:31
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I read “Audacity ads” and thought for a moment they had gone to the dark side
interdimensionalmeme@lemmy.ml
on 14 Feb 2024 02:41
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We already had a scare with them, but turns out it was very unfair overreaction to the project.
In this case I’m happy as long as it’s hardware platform independent and uses open source released models.
AI music art has been for a long time in the hands of industry moguls and us peasants have had nothing. So I’m happy with anything that puts this power in the hands of the everyman.
doctorcrimson@lemmy.world
on 14 Feb 2024 06:43
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Was it unfair? I haven’t been following since they got bought out by spyware?
EDIT: Audacity was acquired by a company called MuseGroup in 2021 who added unnecessary telemetry and they admit that they do provide the data the collect to third parties. Some claim the changes were reverted but I haven’t confirmed that myself so until I see there is no telemetry it’s spyware as far as I’m concerned.
tabular@lemmy.world
on 14 Feb 2024 00:53
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Was the training data ethically sourced (for music generation)?
How do music creators feel about their work potentially being regenerated and used in other’s works?
ArmokGoB@lemmy.dbzer0.com
on 14 Feb 2024 03:44
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I could almost agree but I think there is value in copyleft: a hack of copyright to ensure users have some of the rights copyright denies when you get a copy/derivative work from another.
With no copyright it’s great that you won’t be sued if you share software but in practice a mere binary isn’t enough (reverse engineering is impractical). We need the source code to be able to change it (or understand what it’s even doing). I won’t support removing all copyright law without a solution.
Elderos@sh.itjust.works
on 14 Feb 2024 04:24
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Define ethically sourced.
hansl@lemmy.world
on 14 Feb 2024 06:21
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Getting permission to copy each music work for use in training data may be ethically important while the creators are dependant on income from that work to survive, or just as a social contract.
kuneho@lemmy.world
on 14 Feb 2024 08:46
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you are saying this like the music indistry weren’t about resampling/remixing/rethinking existing songs/melodies/phrases already. it always was. and that’s fine! people always gets down to the source if they hear something fancy.
Indeed, but without reason to change my mind it will remain the same.
Meowoem@sh.itjust.works
on 14 Feb 2024 10:44
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The capitalist mindset really is a weird one, rent seeking is out of control. We’re talking about a tool that allows independent creators and hobby users to improve the quality of their projects but all you can think about is the possibility of getting a couple of dollars in royalties.
Regular users being able to use advanced noise reduction allows regular people to better compete with corporations, it’s the sort of technology which can help displace the monopolies which rule the world. But you’re against it because they didn’t give you 6 cents for listening to your cover version of country roads
tabular@lemmy.world
on 14 Feb 2024 12:04
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Consider there is nuance here. I write code and want people to use it but only if they follow the license that means they must share it with others. I liked the idea of AI creating art for me until I considered the tool’s method of creation and the negative effect taking from artists may have.
I suggest supporting independent creators directly instead.
General_Effort@lemmy.world
on 14 Feb 2024 17:22
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Completely agree, but one thing:
help displace the monopolies
These monopolies are a social/legal problem. It can’t be solved with technology. The increased FTC action in the US under the Biden administration are really a hopeful sign.
I am worried about the number of people who want to go in the opposite direction, which “ethically sourced” is simply code for.
In April 2021, Muse Group acquired the famous audio editing applicaiton Audacity. Their goals for Audacity were to bring much needed improvements to Audacity. However, not too long after, there was an attempt to add telemetry to the program
exhaust_fan@lemmy.world
on 14 Feb 2024 21:47
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Ok so what’s Tenacity? A fork pre shittification?
_dev_null@lemmy.zxcvn.xyz
on 15 Feb 2024 00:17
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Aye, but a little more convoluted. TL;DR: Several new projects forked to avoid the enshitification, and with much time and drama, most of the actually active maintainers joined forces under the Tenacity name+repo. (And 4chan was part of the drama, because of course they were.)
ElPussyKangaroo@lemmy.world
on 15 Feb 2024 11:21
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Oof. That’s sad.
laughterlaughter@lemmy.world
on 14 Feb 2024 10:54
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Blue_Morpho@lemmy.world
on 14 Feb 2024 14:29
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To make music louder so it stands out, producers amplify the music until the waveform looks like a straight line instead of peaks and valleys of loud and soft
sapetoku@sh.itjust.works
on 14 Feb 2024 21:00
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I’ve been using the OpenVINO plugins for a few weeks and it’s genuinely impressive. Noise cancelling is one thing, but the transcription tool is amazing. I can create subtitles from conference recordings in minutes and create transcripts of recorded zoom calls, etc. and it does it for multiple languages.
That’s the kind of shit I like using AI for.
mojofrododojo@lemmy.world
on 14 Feb 2024 23:18
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threaded - newest
[Edit: indeed, its actually good that it’s 2gb]
2gb plugin??!
Btw, does it work with tenacity?
It seems reasonable given it includes multiple AI models.
Isn’t tenacity a joke project made by 4channers
Tenacity is a Audacity fork without telemetry
Isn’t the telemetry in Audacity opt-in anyway?
.
The fork was created when Audacity was bought and one of the first things the new developers were about to do was add opt-out telemetry. People didn’t like that at all. From what I read in this thread, they ended up adding opt-in telemetry instead.
That fork is sneedacity, which is very dead.
Gotcha, thank you for the info. Gotta admit their made-up words are pretty funny
AI models are often multiple gigabytes, tbh it’s a good sign that it’s not “AI” marketing bullshit (less of a risk with open source projects anyway). I’m pretty wary of “AI” audio software that’s only a few megabytes.
Why are they that big? Is it more than code? How could you get to gigabytes of code?
It's basically a huge graph/flowchart.
It’s really nothing of the sort.
There are graph neural networks (meaning NNs that work on graphs), but I don’t think that’s what is used here.
I do not understand what you mean by “routes”. I suspect that you have misunderstood something fundamental.
You can see a neural net as a graph in that the neurons are connected nodes. I don’t believe that graph theory is very helpful, though. The weights are parameters in a system of linear equations; the numbers in a matrix/tensor. That’s not how the term is used in graph theory, AFAIK.
ETA: What you say about “routes” (=paths?) is something that I can only make sense of, if I assume that you misunderstood something. Else, I simply don’t know what that is talking about.
If you look at the nodes which are most likely to trigger from given inputs then you can draw paths
I still don’t know what this is supposed to mean for neural nets. I think it reflects a misunderstanding.
The current wave of AI is around Large Language Models or LLMs. These are basically the result of a metric fuckton of calculation results generated from running a load of input data in, in different ways. Given these are often the result of things like text, pictures or audio that have been distilled down into numbers, you can imagine we’re talking a lot of data.
(This is massively simplified, by someone who doesn’t entirely understand it themselves)
.
They’re composed of many big matrices, which scale quadratically in size. A 32x32 matrix is 4x the size of a 16x16 matrix.
Currently, AI means Artificial Neural Network (ANN). That’s only one specific approach. What ANN boils down to is one huge system of equations.
The file stores the parameters of these equations. It’s what’s called a matrix in math. A parameter is simply a number by which something is multiplied. Colloquially, such a file of parameters is called an AI model.
2 GB is probably an AI model with 1 billion parameters with 16 bit precision. Precision is how many digits you have. The more digits you have, the more precise you can give a value.
When people talk about training an AI, they mean finding the right parameters, so that the equations compute the right thing. The bigger the model, the smarter it can be.
Does that answer the question? It’s probably missing a lot.
Tensorflowlite models are tiny, but they’re potentially as much an audio revolution as synthetizer were in the 70s. It’s hard to tell if that’s what we’re looking at here.
2gb is pretty normal for an AI model. I have some small LLM models on my PC and they’re about 7-10gb big. The big ones take up even more space.
Into the trash it goes
Why is that?
Open source projects are now catching up to the AI buzzword. I wonder who could be behind this.
AI, like cloud computing, is just a layman’s term for something else. You will not be able to stem the tide of language changing. It just means machine learning now. Just like how cloud computing is just a term for computing in a k8s cluster in someone’s data center.
Neural nets have been a part of AI ever since the term was coined 70 years ago. The one thing one could complain about is that the term may be narrowing to that specific approach.
Strictly, neural nets are a specific kind of ML and ML is a specific kind of AI. The term AI seems to have gone out of fashion in academia, though.
AI is far too broad of a term, for sure.
noise suppression and speech transcription are anything but useless…
Audacity was already in the trash since the buyout and telemetry data collection.
I never understood the opposition to anonymized telemetry. While adding an entire network stack for it is certainly quite atrocious, there's no problem with the principle I can see.
Some people prefer to not have their every action watched and observed by some anonymous Big brother.
The people who do not get that are the people who profit from the watching, and the people that are, best case, inconsiderate of the desires and feelings of other people.
It is not normal nor is it natural to claim ownership of other people's activity.
It is normal and natural to wish to exist without being observed. Privacy is a fundamental human right and companies are taking advantage of the fact that it is not legally enforced.
Hopefully the laws will catch up and make it so that each and every individual opportunity to directly observe a person must be explicitly approved beforehand with a set time limit on the observation, and that all telemetry must be made publically available and transparent, not only during the original acquisition of data but also in each and every single usage of that data after the fact.
It is only fair after all that should accompany wish to observe you that they must also be equally observed.
But if you anonymize the data, does it really mean someone has their every action watched in a harmful way?
This is an odd place to grand stand. I’m glad you have ideals, but the fact is Audacity was looking to gather industry standard telemetry data (basic system information and crashes) as an opt-in system. This information is extremely important in fixing bugs and prioritising developer resources.
And I could see the forest a whole lot better if all these trees weren't in the way.
It's not that one person is doing it it's that everyone is doing it.
The only way to stop everyone from doing it is to stop everyone from doing it.
It’s pretty clear from my argument that I believe that it is entirely legitimate and unproblematic for everyone to collect basic data like system information and crashes. I’m not making an exception for Audacity, I’m broadly accepting this behaviour.
Oy vey
This is Intel's plug-in, with otherwise no relation to Audacity. Plus, as long as they don't bundle it, I don't see a problem with it.
Ahhh everything makes sense now
This is a case where you didn’t even need to read the article. You just had to read the headline!
Seriously, it’s right there!
tsmt
The music separation and speech transcription plug-ins actually sound nice. Obviously that will depend on how reliable they actually are.
I just tried the OpenVINO transcription on a random speech-over-music mp3 I happened to have: it works great, FAR better quality than I expected (I think I was expecting Youtube quality, but this is much cleaner and clearer). Perfect capitalization, good sentence breaks, adequate punctuation (commas, periods, question marks).
Only problem is that I can’t figure out how to copy the transcription so I can paste it outside Audacity: the transcriptions show up attached to specific portions of sound, like track labels. While it will save me the trouble of having to actually transcribe audio manually, to get them out of Audacity and into a word processor it looks like I may still be stuck copying each “label” individually unless I can find a way to copy or export them.
EDITED TO ADD: I just answered my own question, lol. File -> Export Other -> Export Labels -> .txt file
Audacity just doesn’t seem worth the trouble after discovering Reaper and how powerful it is for only $60.
Does Reaper have similar AI tools? Not a dig, a real question.
Not at the moment, from what I know
I see what you mean, in your case as well as mine, Reaper is far more powerful and so far more adequate to our needs But people do not always search for powerful software. Sometimes they only want something easy to learn, with only basic tasks but well performed and entirely free. When you have these requirements, Audacity is better
Audacity is a great learning tool for intro absolutely! When you’re just dipping your toes into recording and editing, free and $60 is a huge difference.
I feel like users that are going to be using any of the features of this plug-in, they’re probably at the point that going to Reaper makes sense.
I’m a sound engineer and I use different DAWs for different purposes. There’s just no one DAW that does all, so this is a compromise I’m happy to go with.
When I do podcast editing, I use Audacity to split multi-track WAV files and for truncating silence. It’s just waaaay easier to do this there than on Reaper. Plus it has a loopback recording feature built-in which I use for Zoom meeting recordings etc.
I use Pro Tools for audio post, but for most of what I do I’m a Reaper guy. It’s very powerful as you said and it just works.
I know it can be a hassle switching DAWs (muscle memory on shortcuts can get weird), but for me, I like making the most of the strengths of a tool rather than forcing something to do everything.
That’s awesome!
I learned DAWs with ProTools back around 2006 in college. Dropped out because I didn’t want to enter a competitive trade where my best opportunities were moving out of state.
Got sucked into another industry and haven’t touched much audio for the past decade. Getting back into it now and started on Audacity but the 2021 buyout had me confused where to land with the Tenacity split. the good/bad of open source I suppose but as a user being in the middle of a split was frustrating and detracting from recording. Finding out about Reaper and talking to people leaving ProTools behind even within the industry was just what I needed when I needed it.
My daughter (11yo) is now getting into DAWs as her current goal is to score an internship at KEXP, being able to share with her all the stuff I learned in school has been so much fun.
Windows only :(
According to the repo, it builds fine on Linux. They just don’t distribute a binary for it.
github.com/intel/…/27
It’s already on the AUR
I fucking love arch and its community
Presumably you could use it in a VM running Windows
I thought audacity was tarnished with spyware or something these days. Is it safe again?
Not really, but there is a fork called tenacity which fixes this
after looking into it:
it’s not and it never was.
a) it’s open source, so nobody’s putting that shit in there without getting caught
b) it had an opt-in error reporting feature that would send data back… that was the entire thing…
What? You must be joking. Really? The entire thing was about opt-in error reporting?
… seriously, that can’t be it, can it?
yep… really just that…
i’ve used it forever with a very restrictive firewall and i’ve never seen it do anything unexpected… or any phoning home at all…
Not really that simple, it was an apparent change to the privacy policy that vaguely anticipated collection of arbitrary user data, which shook the confidence of the open source community on the project. The fact this happened right after audacity was sold was the cherry on top.
github.com/audacity/audacity/issues/1213
Changes were eventually reverted or revised.
Were they reverted? I’ll have to check later, but an official statement from Muse Group stated they provided the data they collected to third parties so idk. If the telemetry is still there then I’m not downloading it, Open Source projects generally don’t need telemetry to begin with.
in 2021 Audacity was acquired by a company called MuseGroup who added unnecessary telemetry and they admit that they do provide the data the collect to third parties. It’s spyware as far as I’m concerned.
If opt-in telemetry is spyware then the FOSS community truly is off the rails.
If it was truly opt in, then why did the community feel the need to create forks removing the telemetry? Plus, a lot of FOSS don’t need telemetry to start with. They get tons of voluntary high quality feedback without automated collection.
I’ve read this exact or very similar comment from you for the fourth time at least. You’re a spambot as far as I’m concerned.
Lmao
Pot says the Kettle exagerates.
That’s not entirely true, Audacity was acquired by a company called MuseGroup who added unnecessary telemetry and they admit that they do provide the data the collect to third parties. It’s spyware as far as I’m concerned.
i don’t believe you
And thats fair, you should always do your own research and make your own informed decisions.
Point a has always me me wonder, is that accurate? Are there actually people going through the code to make sure open source isn’t malicious? I can barely read my coworkers code… Let alone a strangers.
people are definitely going through the code on a project as popular as audacity…
less well known stuff is much less scrutinized, of course
Its way less work than going through the code to check for telemetry unless it is an intentionally hidden attack- just use Wireshark and check if there is network traffic other than checking for an update on program start.
If a project is popular people will make changes to it every day. But you can look at the repo and judge for yourself.
It was a pull request to add opt-out analytics that got blown out of proportion, where the real issue was the EULA and how tonedeaf of a move it was considering the community around Audacity. IIRC, they ended up replacing it with opt-in analytics.
I’m sure I used to use Audacity back in the day as a free, quick and dirty editor to splice up audio tracks. I’m talking at least 10 years ago.
Had no idea it was still even a thing.
It’s honestly pretty much the industry standard for indie creators. There’s nothing super flashy about it, it just does its job very well.
This along with 7-zip and OBS and the like have been pretty impressive success stories for FOSS, even if most of their users don’t even know what that means.
They got acquired in 2021 so a lot of people have been very skeptical about it lately.
Awesome, useful features if they work well. I’ll have to try it out.
Oh boy this is what I always wanted woooo
I read “Audacity ads” and thought for a moment they had gone to the dark side
We already had a scare with them, but turns out it was very unfair overreaction to the project.
In this case I’m happy as long as it’s hardware platform independent and uses open source released models.
AI music art has been for a long time in the hands of industry moguls and us peasants have had nothing. So I’m happy with anything that puts this power in the hands of the everyman.
Was it unfair? I haven’t been following since they got bought out by spyware?
EDIT: Audacity was acquired by a company called MuseGroup in 2021 who added unnecessary telemetry and they admit that they do provide the data the collect to third parties. Some claim the changes were reverted but I haven’t confirmed that myself so until I see there is no telemetry it’s spyware as far as I’m concerned.
Was the training data ethically sourced (for music generation)?
How do music creators feel about their work potentially being regenerated and used in other’s works?
Considering copyright is unethical to begin with…
.
I could almost agree but I think there is value in copyleft: a hack of copyright to ensure users have some of the rights copyright denies when you get a copy/derivative work from another.
With no copyright it’s great that you won’t be sued if you share software but in practice a mere binary isn’t enough (reverse engineering is impractical). We need the source code to be able to change it (or understand what it’s even doing). I won’t support removing all copyright law without a solution.
Define ethically sourced.
Free range grass fed.
Getting permission to copy each music work for use in training data may be ethically important while the creators are dependant on income from that work to survive, or just as a social contract.
you are saying this like the music indistry weren’t about resampling/remixing/rethinking existing songs/melodies/phrases already. it always was. and that’s fine! people always gets down to the source if they hear something fancy.
I can’t image people always get to the source, my understanding is most music does not have attribution of significant portions copied.
well yeah, there’s a lot of things I can’t imagine either, the world is a strange place
Indeed, but without reason to change my mind it will remain the same.
The capitalist mindset really is a weird one, rent seeking is out of control. We’re talking about a tool that allows independent creators and hobby users to improve the quality of their projects but all you can think about is the possibility of getting a couple of dollars in royalties.
Regular users being able to use advanced noise reduction allows regular people to better compete with corporations, it’s the sort of technology which can help displace the monopolies which rule the world. But you’re against it because they didn’t give you 6 cents for listening to your cover version of country roads
Consider there is nuance here. I write code and want people to use it but only if they follow the license that means they must share it with others. I liked the idea of AI creating art for me until I considered the tool’s method of creation and the negative effect taking from artists may have.
I suggest supporting independent creators directly instead.
Completely agree, but one thing:
These monopolies are a social/legal problem. It can’t be solved with technology. The increased FTC action in the US under the Biden administration are really a hopeful sign.
I am worried about the number of people who want to go in the opposite direction, which “ethically sourced” is simply code for.
They can always discuss that with their psychologists! :)
Use Tenacity instead
What’s the difference?
Ok so what’s Tenacity? A fork pre shittification?
Aye, but a little more convoluted. TL;DR: Several new projects forked to avoid the enshitification, and with much time and drama, most of the actually active maintainers joined forces under the Tenacity name+repo. (And 4chan was part of the drama, because of course they were.)
Oof. That’s sad.
Why?
Edit: I see now. tenacityaudio.org/docs/_content/Motivation.html
I wonder if it can “de-brickwall” music now
De-brickwall?
Edit: Googled it.
Wanna share with the rest of the class?
To make music louder so it stands out, producers amplify the music until the waveform looks like a straight line instead of peaks and valleys of loud and soft
Ah, the loudness wars …
Useless.
On lemme I’m often reminded of the vegan joke:
How do you tell if someone is a Linux user? Don’t worry, they’ll tell you.
Having no need for over 4gb of RAM?
I’ve been using the OpenVINO plugins for a few weeks and it’s genuinely impressive. Noise cancelling is one thing, but the transcription tool is amazing. I can create subtitles from conference recordings in minutes and create transcripts of recorded zoom calls, etc. and it does it for multiple languages.
That’s the kind of shit I like using AI for.
any insight as to what this is?