Voice actors within the video game, cartoon, and anime industries have come out against the use of AI websites that copy and sell their voices without their permission.
Last Friday, voice actor Steve Blum, known for his role as Spike Spiegel in the English dub of Cowboy Bebop, posted a PSA of sorts to his Twitter followers, warning them not to buy into any AI website thatâs copied and sold his voice.
âHey friends, I know AI technology is exciting, but if you see my voice, or any of the characters that I voice, offered on any of those sites, please know that I have not given my permission, and never will,â Blum tweeted. âThis is highly unethical. We all appreciate your support. Thank you.â
Blum wasnât the only one to share their concerns over AI sites copying and selling their voices for profit without their permission. Actor Sean Schemmel, the English voice for Dragon Ball Zâs Goku, was one of several who came out in solidarity with Blum in a reply saying heâs never given permission for an AI service to use his voice in any way.
https://twitter.com/embed/status/1625180669809930241
âEXACTLY THIS and Iâll go a step further: Anyone who does this without the voice artistâs permission is harming voice actors,â Jennifer Hale, the prolific voice actor who plays the female version of Commander Shepard from the Mass Effect series, wrote in a quote retweet. âPlease do not do this, and please do not support people who do. Thank you.â
âI concur and am disgusted that our lifetimes & bodies of work are being pirated,â Charlie Adler (Red Guy from Cow and Chicken) wrote. âNO site has been given permission or has been authorized to use my voice AI or otherwise! I was alerted to fakeyou yesterday. I did not EVER consent to my voice being sold ! FRAUD !â
âIâve been warned by friends that some of my charactersâ voices are on these AI sites, I would also like to make it clear that if you see any site that has my âvoicesâ offered, it is without my permission and I am explicitly against it,â SungWon Cho, God of War: Ragnarokâs Ratatoskr wrote in a quote retweet
To All #VoiceActors or aspiring VA's: You know this AI Voice situation is serious when notable actors @stephaniesheh @blumspew & @karaedwards step up to talk about it. If you're a #voiceacting fan & you're on my page, RT this to your friends & make them aware of what's going on! https://t.co/DcpM2BB6A5
â Stephen Stanton (@Stephen_Stanton) February 11, 2023
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In the past, the use case for AI voice sites seemed limited to YouTube parody videos where content creators produce extra lines of dialogue for a famous celebrity to punch up the humor of their videos. However, much like with deepfake porn of Twitch streamers, the upward trajectory of AI-generated voice technologyâs improvements combined with legal systemsâ slow pace to bring laws up to speed with AI technology, especially those used without consent, has created a massive headache.
AI-generated voice harassment campaigns
In a recent Vice article, four victims of AI-generated voice recounted how the technology was used in harassment campaigns against them. One example of AI-generated voice misuse saw Twitter accounts share actorsâ private information like their home addresses using an AI-generated voice of Agent 47 from the Hitman series.
âWhat was the bigger frustration was how ineffective Twitterâs support system was in removing the post,â Tom Schalk, a voice actor from the horror puzzle game Poppy Playtime told Motherboard. âRegardless of the stolen identity, private information posted publicly and the racist slurs, Twitterâs support system deemed the post and the account as perfectly fine.â
The AI-generated voice site at the center of these controversies is ElevenLabs, an artificial intelligence company that says it has âthe most realistic and versatile AI speech software, ever.â According to Vice, ElevenLabs has sent Twitter DMs to the victims of harassment campaigns and acknowledged that the technology used for the Agent 47 voice was their audio, but denied that the voices that doxed them were made using its technology.
In the past, AI voice sites like ElevenLabs have been used to create audio clips of Harry Potter actress Emma Watsonâs voice reading Mein Kampf, Ben Shapiro making racist remarks about U.S. Congresswoman Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, and Rick and Mortyâs Rick Sanchez saying âIâm going to beat my fucking wife Morty,â according to Vice. The last example is particularly uncomfortable considering Rick voice actor Justin Roiland is currently facing two felony domestic abuse charges from 2020.
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Vocal Varients solution
While the misuse of AI-generated voices presents a clear problem for voice actors, it hasnât stopped the community from rallying together to help solve this new technological crisis. Transformers: Rise of The Beasts voice actor David Sobolov and Sailor Moon voice actress Stephanie Sheh suggest that voice actors send cease and desist emails to the voice generator sites and notify Vocal Variants, an advocacy group of union and non-union voice actors who are concerned about actors signing contracts that ask them to sign the rights to their voices to AI clients.
ACTORS: To remove your voice from the top two AI Voice generator sites, send a cease and desist email to:
[email protected]
[email protected]If you find other sites using unauthorized voices, please notify [email protected] so they can get the word out.
â David Sobolov (@volobos) February 12, 2023
Vocal Varients is made up of actors like Yuri Lowenthal (Peter Parker in Marvelâs Spider-Man), Cissy Jones (Lilith Clawthorne in The Owl House), and Keythe Farley (Thane Krios in Mass Effect). According to its website, Vocal Varientsâ goals include:
Creating a standardized definition of this type of work, implementing protections for performers, and doing educational outreach to the creators and users of AI/Synthetic voice technology to foster fair and equitable work for everyone.
Actualizing legal preservation of vocal likeness and performance integrity, and identifying the industry-wide risks of AI/Synthetic voice technology around vocal identity misuse and/or malpractice.
Educating performers and their representatives about the future implications of AI/Synthetic voice automation, and amending problematic contract terms
Creating a standardized contract or set of contract clauses that properly protect against abuse
Kotaku reached out to Vocal Varients and ElevenLabs for comment but did not receive a reply by the time of publication.
âIf you find our voices on AI voice apps please let us know. Their databases are often only visable to subscribers or people who have paid for the app,â Sheh tweeted, with the hashtag #protectrealvoices. âPlease let us know if our voices are being stolen.â