Jonathan Moeller's Blog, page 41
April 11, 2024
Amazon Virtual Voice Audiobooks?
Reader PML writes in to ask:
Several of my favorite offers have opted to use AI Virtual Voice to release some of their older titles in audio format.
I emailed you a long while ago hoping for more audio releases for Caina and Nadia. You indicated that audio publishing is expensive and you preferred to release titles that were not short in length.
I totally understand. But I wondered if you have considered releasing your back titles using virtual voice? The performance is not bad, and I would really enjoy listening to all the books featuring Caina and Nadia. I don’t know what the pricing scale is, but it’s probably quite a bit less than a live reader.
Virtual Voice is Amazon’s new program for creating AI-narrated audiobooks. Will I be using Virtual Voice to turn some of my older titles to audiobook?
No.
Why?
So, there’s three levels to my answer here. 1.) Is it ethical to use AI for audiobook narration? 2.) Is AI narration good enough for audiobook narration? 3.) Does this help visually impaired listeners?
I should mention that I have in fact experimented quite a bit with AI-narrated audiobooks. Part of the reason I did this was because I wanted to understand the technology so I had an informed opinion about it. Google Play beat Amazon to the punch last year, and I experimented with turning the SILENT ORDER series into audiobooks with their technology, since I don’t think SILENT ORDER sells enough to support audiobooks. I didn’t think the AI-generated audiobooks were good enough to sell in good conscience (and just because you’re selling something doesn’t mean anyone will buy it, more on that below), so instead I put the AI narrated audiobooks on YouTube for free. That said, I did turn Adsense on for the audiobooks, so I made a satisfactory if small bit of money from YouTube ads in 2023. You can listen to SILENT ORDER: IRON HAND in AI audio here.
Overall, the response from listeners seemed to be that they loved the story (thanks!) but hated the artificial voice. Like, if they had actually paid for it, I could just imagine the complaints. I think a lot of the authors who create Virtual Voice audiobooks will be disappointed by the response. Like, audiobooks are basically self-publishing on Hard Mode, but if you’re coming to the market with an AI-generated audiobook, it will be even harder to sell than one voiced by a human who knows what he or she is doing.
On to more details!
1.) Is it ethical to use AI for audiobook narration?
“Ethics in AI” is a bottomless quagmire of an Internet discussion. Overall, I think AI technology creates vastly more problems than it solves and is really nothing more than Very Fancy Autocomplete. I also suspect there’s a bit of a bubble to it like there was with cryptocurrency and NFTs. For a while all the Galaxy Brain influencer people thought crypto and NFTs were the future, and then the bubble burst and a significant portion of everything connected to crypto and NFTs turned out to be a big old scam, and all the Galaxy Brains migrated over to touting AI. I suspect a lot of the “AI” technology rushed out now has a same speculative bubble effect, and when the bubble bursts some companies are going to be out billions since they spent all that money building Infinite Crap Generators. Or a lot of people are rushing to shove AI into stuff because it’s trendy, like how the Washington State Lottery decided for whatever reason to put an AI image generator on its site, which it had to pull down hastily when it started generating deepfake nude images.
(It is amusing how some of the really pro-AI Galaxy Brains like to say the US needs to develop AI or else the Chinese will get it first, as if having an Infinite Crap Generator to make deepfake nudes will somehow determine geopolitical dominance in the 21st century.)
But all that said, I don’t think AI is going away. The US courts seem consistent so far in their opinion that AI isn’t plagiarism but it isn’t copyrightable, and there’s a wide range of useful activity in the “not copyrightable but not plagiarism” space. AI can do useful things that crypto and NFTs can’t. Like, suppose you’re applying for forty different jobs, and you could use ChatGPT or Copilot to crank out forty different customized cover letters for your job application. Given how messed-up the job market is at the moment, I could hardly blame someone for doing that. And you see examples of people using generative AI not to create artwork but to handle data processing type chores (like the cover letters) in clever ways that don’t seem cross any moral boundaries.
So I suspect everyone will have to examine their own consciences and decide where their own line is for generative AI.
For me, I decided I’m not going to sell anything that I didn’t make myself (or, in the case of an audiobook, made by a human I hired). If I’m selling something, it was 100% written by Jonathan Moeller, or 100% narrated by a human I hired, and the cover image doesn’t contain any AI-generated art elements. (This is also true of books and stories I give away for free, like my permafree series starters.) That’s where I’ve decided my line is going to be with AI usage.
I have used AI images for Facebook ads, since ads are low-resolution anyway, and you often have to change out the image every week or so anyway. Ad images are often essentially disposable…so why not use the disposable products of AI for them?
2.) Is AI narration good enough for audiobook narration?
All my criticisms of AI aside, “AI voice” or “Virtual Voice” isn’t a new technology. It’s just improved text-to-speech synthesis technology, and text-to-speech has been around since the late 1960s. The AI part just makes the synthetic voice sound closer to an actual human voice than the more obviously artificial tones of older technology. It’s also pretty good at imitating a real human voice, which is why you can go on YouTube and see comedy videos of President Biden trying to make his way through Skyrim or something.
Is the AI narration good enough to support creating a paid audiobook? Well, kinda sorta. It’s good enough now that it creates a near-perfect imitation of a human voice. The trouble is that the voice is so perfect that it triggers the uncanny valley effect where you encounter something that almost seems human but isn’t. It’s also really bad at emotion. The best narrators make it sound like they’re telling a story, and that means varying the emotion of the voice at appropriate times. Text-to-speech simply isn’t very good at that.
That’s part of the reason I won’t use Virtual Voice – I don’t feel the end product is of high-enough quality to sell. Give away for free on YouTube, sure. But sell? No.
It would be good enough for drier non-fiction – like legal casebooks, geological surveys, that kind of thing. A nonfiction book that requires varied emotion – like a war memoir, for instance, or a comedic travelogue – would not work well with AI narration.
3.) Does this help visually impaired listeners?
While I don’t want to use AI narration to create paid audiobooks, I would like to see it become more ubiquitous.
I think the mission of technology is to help us overcome or ameliorate the inherent frailties of the human condition. So I would like to see AI narration eventually become just a button in the ereader app. Like, you hit the read aloud app, and the computer reads to you in a voice of your choosing. You’ll still have the option to buy a human-narrated audiobook, if available, but the option to have the device read to you would be there if you need it.
We’re kind of already there – all the major operation systems for computer and mobile have read-aloud functions, it’s just not implemented consistently and the voices aren’t always very good.
So, I won’t use Virtual Voice or AI narration to create any audiobooks for sale.
In the spirit of full disclosure, as of right now I have agreements with four different narrators to produce four different audiobooks. So I am literally putting my money where my mouth is.
-JM
April 10, 2024
Question of the week: podcasts
It’s time for question of the week!
This week’s question: if you listen to podcasts, what podcasts do you listen to most frequently? No wrong answers, obviously.
For myself, I did not start really listening to podcasts until 2019, when I started listening to some self-publishing ones. In the past few years, I’ve also discover retro video game podcasts. In that time, I’ve mostly listened to the Sell More Books Show and the Remember The Game Podcast.
-JM
April 9, 2024
The Pulp Writer Show, Episode 195: The Best Writing Software
In this week’s episode, we take a look at the pros and cons of some of the most popular writing software, and a share a preview of the new HALF-ELVEN THIEF audiobook narrated by Leanne Woodward. You can listen to the entire episode (with transcript) at the official Pulp Writer Show site.
-JM
April 8, 2024
WIZARD-THIEF cover image
I am far enough along in the editing to share the cover image of WIZARD-THIEF!
If all goes well it will be out before the end of April.
-JM
Coupon of the week, 4/8/2024
Once again it’s time for Coupon of the Week!
I’m hoping to start on SHIELD OF DARKNESS soon, so let’s look back at some of the DRAGONSKULL audiobooks! This coupon code will get you 25% off the audiobook of DRAGONSKULL: SWORD OF THE SQUIRE (as excellently narrated by Brad Wills) at my Payhip store:
SPRINGSQUIRE
The coupon code is valid through April 23rd, 2024. So if you need a new audiobook for spring, we’ve got you covered!
-JM
April 5, 2024
WIZARD-THIEF rough draft done
I am pleased to report that the rough draft of WIZARD-THIEF is done at 74,000 words, which makes it about 15,000 words longer than HALF-ELVEN THIEF.
Next up is THIEF’S FAVOR, a bonus short story that my newsletter subscribers will get free in ebook form when WIZARD-THIEF comes out.
Hopefully the book will come out in mid-April!
Once it is out, the next two books I will write are CLOAK OF TITANS and SHIELD OF DARKNESS.
-JM
April 4, 2024
HALF-ELVEN THIEF now in audiobook!
I am very pleased to report that HALF-ELVEN THIEF Is now in audiobook, as excellently narrated by Leanne Woodward!
You can listen to it at Audible, Amazon US, Amazon UK, Amazon AU, Kobo, Apple Books, Payhip, Chirp, Storytel, and Spotify. Google Play should hopefully be available in another week or so.
-JM
April 3, 2024
Question of the week: your first album
It’s time for Question of the Week!
What was the first musical album you ever purchased? No wrong answers, obviously.
The idea for this week’s question arrived because over Easter weekend I helped someone set up a device for ripping LP records to MP3. This was in fact the first time I had ever attempted to use an LP record in any form, since by the time I became interested in purchasing music (more on that below) the LP era was well and truly over. Or is it? I thought it was amusing that vinyl outsold CDs in 2023 because vinyl is so much more cumbersome and fragile.
Anyway, the very first time I bought an album with my own money was probably later than most people. For some reason, I have a hard time understanding song lyrics, and it usually sounds like monotonous droning or warbling to my ear. (One of the few exceptions is Johnny Cash, who I can usually understand.) Because of that, I have never really connected with most popular music and gravitated towards the soundtracks of computer games and movies that I liked.
So the first soundtrack I deliberately purchased with my own money was part of a computer game collection. Specifically, the Quest For Glory collection in 1997, which came with a CD of the Quest for Glory V: Dragon Fire soundtrack, which I wanted. I already had all the Quest For Glory games on CD or in some cases floppy disk, but I got the collection just so I could have the soundtrack CD. Twenty-seven years later, I listened to that soundtrack while working on WIZARD-THIEF today.
-JM
April 2, 2024
The Pulp Writer Show, Episode 194: Writing Advice From Eight Famous Writers
In this week’s episode, we take a look at eight pieces of writing advice from famous writers. I also discuss why I decided to change the name of my SEVENFOLD SWORD ONLINE series to STEALTH & SPELLS ONLINE. You can listen to the episode (with transcript) at the official Pulp Writer Show podcast site.
-JM
April 1, 2024
Coupon of the week, 4/1/2024
Once again it’s time for Coupon of the Week.
To celebrate the release of GHOST IN THE VEILS, let’s get caught up with some of Caina’s older adventures in the GHOST NIGHT series. This coupon code will get you 25% off any of the GHOST NIGHT ebooks at my Payhip store:
SPRINGNIGHT
The coupon is valid through April 16th, 2024. So if you’re looking for some spring reading, we’ve got you covered!
-JM