Anime

Amazon Pulls Back From Anime A.I. Following Recent Controversy

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Earlier this week, Amazon posted a job listing for a Creative Director position that would focus on “Dubbing” for Prime Video. The description specifically noted that it would focus on artificial intelligence, reading, “The role would spearhead the creative vision for its AI-enabled dubbing platform.” The Amazon listing also noted that the position would “identify opportunities and set up creative workflows to expand A.I. dubbing to new languages and content types.” Once the job listing was discovered, Amazon garnered some major pushback online, and the position has seemingly been stricken from their job bank. While Amazon hasn’t officially commented on the removal of the role, we have to imagine that the blowback from anime fans was a key reason.

What Was This Amazon A.I. Role?

MAPPA

The other aspects of the job description for Amazon’s Localization Enablement & Accessibility Program (Leap) Team Director were listed as a part of the application, hinting at more use of artificial intelligence in the future.

When the artificial intelligence-made Dubs were discovered, clips from the anime were quickly shared online, and needless to say, the quality was far below the routine English Dubs created by human voice actors. Since the likes of Banana Fish, No Games No Life, and Vinland Saga were found to house A.I. dubs, the series were taken down from the streaming service and have yet to return to the platform.

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Via Anime Corner