Get the latest tech news
DeepL launches DeepL Voice, real-time, text-based translations from voices and videos
DeepL has made a name for itself with online text translation it claims is more nuanced and precise than services from the likes of Google — a pitch that
DeepL has made a name for itself with online text translation it claims is more nuanced and precise than services from the likes of Google — a pitch that has catapulted the German startup to a valuation of $2 billion and more than 100,000 paying customers. English, German, Japanese, Korean, Swedish, Dutch, French, Turkish, Polish, Portuguese, Russian, Spanish and Italian are the spoken languages that DeepL can “hear” today. Kutylowski insisted that although voices will be travelling to its servers to be translated (the processing does not happen on device), that nothing is retained by its systems, nor used for training its LLMs, and that ultimately it will work with its customers to make sure that they do not violate GDPR or any other data protection regulations.
Or read this on TechCrunch