→2020: + embed video for w:Mork n Mindy'''" is a w:single released by the band w:Sleaford Mods on 30 October 2020, featuring Billy Nomates on guest vocals (captioning adapted from Wikipedia
{{#ev:youtube|dCKbRCUyop8|640px|center|''''''Face editing with Generative Adversarial Networks'''''' by ''Arxiv Insights'' on YouTube] Premiered '''2019-09'''-13}}
{{#ev:youtube|dCKbRCUyop8|640px|center|''''''Face editing with Generative Adversarial Networks'''''' by ''Arxiv Insights'' on YouTube] Premiered '''2019-09'''-13}}
{{#ev:youtube|GuYczL-FcKc|640px|center|''''''[[Discourse]]'''''' by [[w:Sleaford Mods]] was uploaded by the band to Youtube on '''2019-03'''-25}}
w:Maeil Broadcasting Network in South Korea published an AI news anchor in November 2020 made in conjunction with MoneyBrain. You can enable YouTube auto-generated English subtitles by enabling closed captioning (cc) and then clicking on the setting icon on the video control bar.
"w:Mork n Mindy" is a w:single released by the band w:Sleaford Mods on 30 October 2020, featuring Billy Nomates on guest vocals. The song was written in January 2020.[1]
The single is accompanied by a troubling w:music videow:directed by w:Ben Wheatley[1], uploaded by the band to w:YouTube on the release date.[2]. Imaged in the music video are the two band members Jason Williamson and Andrew Fearn and featuring artist Billy Nomates performing.[2]
Video 'This AI Clones Your Voice After Listening for 5 Seconds' by '2 minute papers' describes the voice thieving machine by Google Research in w:NeurIPS 2018.
#w:Adobe Voco. Adobe Audio Manipulator Sneak Peak with w:Jordan Peele (at Youtube.com). November 2016 demonstration of a Adobe's unreleased sound-like-anyone-machine, the w:Adobe Voco at the w:Adobe MAX 2016 event in w:San Diego, w:California. The original Adobe Voco required 20 minutes of sample to thieve a voice.
A short film 'Doll Face' by Andrew Thomas Huang (.com). There are various unofficial videos using 'Doll Face' as graphics, but with different music. from 2005.
Music video for Bullet by w:Covenant from 2002. Here you can observe the classic "skin looks like cardboard"-bug that stopped the pre-reflectance capture era versions from passing human testing.