7/26/2023 0 Comments Bleep censor sound![]() ![]() “If you had a profanity filter, with sensitivity and someone said ‘fudge’ and word clipped off briefly, the max slider would bleep that,” Pallister said, offering a hypothetical example. When asked if the difference between the “none, some, most or all” slider categories, Kim Pallister, general manager of Intel’s gaming solutions team, said it’s “complicated.” Certain kinds of shit talk might be acceptable, even playful, when shared between friends, but might not be acceptable when it’s a stranger shouting at you. ![]() As Kennedy explained it to Polygon, Intel intended for those sliders to give players options, depending on the situation. “The intent of this has always been to put that that nuanced control in the hands in the users,” Marcus Kennedy, general manager of Intel’s gaming division, told Polygon over video chat. The screenshot depicts the user settings for the software and shows a sliding scale where people can choose between “none, some, most, or all” of categories of hate speech like “racism and xenophobia” or “misogyny.” There’s also a toggle for the N-word. And while the program isn’t new, it became the center of attention when stills from the 40-minute video presentation on it went viral Wednesday. To address the problem, Intel created Bleep. According to the Anti-Defamation League, “22% of gamers have quit playing certain games as a result of these negative experiences.” “Across the board, and across the globe, players raised concerns about witnessing and experiencing toxicity,” he said, before sharing some statistics on how often gamers experience harassment online. Intel spoke to gamers about their needs, the spokesperson said, which included address what the company called “gaming’s dark side”: online toxicity. During this presentation, Roger Chandler, vice president and general manager of client XPU products and solutions, positioned the company as “stewards” of PC gaming who feel some responsibility in moving the platform forward and “making gaming better.” The most recent iteration of the tech was shown off during an event highlighting Intel’s latest developments. The software “bleeps” out offending language (hence the name). It uses AI to censor hate speech in real time during gameplay. Have you ever wanted to censor a little hate speech while playing a game, but not all of it? Thanks to Intel’s Bleep, a software that uses AI to censor voice chat, you can.īleep was developed in partnership with a company called Spirit AI, and is currently in beta following a prototype developed two years ago. ![]()
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