Otter.ai explained

Otter.ai, Inc.
Type:Private
Predecessor:AISense
Location:Mountain View, California, United States
Founders:Sam Liang, Yun Fu
Key People:Sam Liang, CEO
Industry:Transcription software
Products:Otter transcription software for meeting notes

Otter.ai, Inc. is an American transcription software company based in Mountain View, California. The company develops speech to text transcription applications using artificial intelligence and machine learning. Its software, called Otter, shows captions for live speakers, and generates written transcriptions of speech.[1]

History

Otter.ai was founded as AISense in 2016 by Sam Liang and Yun Fu, two computer science engineers with a long history of working with artificial intelligence.[2] [3]

In January 2018, the company announced a partnership with Zoom Video Communications to transcribe video meetings post-conference.[4] In March, the company debuted its first Otter speech translation app at Mobile World Congress.[4] It was available for free for Google's Android and Apple's mobile products.[1] In October, the company launched Otter for Education, a note taking tool designed for college students.[5]

In March 2019, the company launched Otter for Teams, a transcription and storage product for enterprises.[6]

In January 2020, now doing business as Otter.ai, the company announced another US$10M funding round, led by Japanese mobile phone operator NTT Docomo's Docomo Ventures.[7] In April, the company announced it was offering Live Notes for Zoom calls.[8]

Technology

To develop its speech transcription technology, the company says it combined deep machine learning using millions of hours of audio recordings, which were analyzed to train the software and improve the transcription capabilities. The company says that it uses proprietary algorithms to scour the web for these usable audio segments.[9] [10]

In March 2018, technology news site ZDNet reported concerns about Otter's privacy policy, noting that the company could access uploaded recordings and transcriptions. In response the company updated the policy and stated that only the company's chief technology officer would allow access to transcriptions, in response to a "legitimate user request".[11] In 2022, Politico highlighted concerns about the privacy practices of Otter after the company queried a journalist about the purpose of a meeting, transcribed through Otter, with a Uyghur activist.[12]

OtterPilot

In February 2023, Otter.ai launched an AI meeting assistant called OtterPilot, available to all users, which automates meetings, with an AI-generated summary of key meeting topics, automated capture of images of slides shared during virtual meetings, and real-time meeting notes that can be shared and collaborated on. OtterPilot includes Otter Assistant, which can automatically join meetings on a user's calendar and transcribe conversations.[13]

Reception

Digital media website Mashable and technology publication Fast Company named Otter one of the best apps of 2018.[14] [15]

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Solsman . Joan E. . To make transcripts is to hate transcripts, but mobile app Otter does it free . CNET . en . 2018-03-03. 2020-07-01.
  2. Web site: Otter for Teams brings collaborative voice transcription to enterprises . Venturebeat . 2019-03-12 . 2020-07-01.
  3. Web site: Otter.ai CEO on the Zoom add-on you probably need . IDG Connect . 2020-05-18 . 2020-07-01.
  4. Web site: Hiner . Jason . AI breakthrough: Otter.ai app can transcribe your meetings in real time, for free . ZDNet . en . 2018-03-02. 2020-07-01.
  5. Web site: AISense's Otter for Education brings voice transcription to colleges. Venturebeat . 2018-10-31 . 2020-07-01.
  6. Web site: Transcription service Otter launches enterprise app for teams. ZDNET . 2019-03-12 . 2020-07-02.
  7. Web site: Otter.ai raises $10 million for AI transcription tool. Venturebeat . 2020-01-23 . 2020-07-01.
  8. Web site: Otter.ai's newest feature offers live, interactive transcripts of your Zoom meetings. Techcrunch . 2020-01-23 . 2020-07-01.
  9. Web site: Clarke . Laurie . Could Otter.ai's ambitions in voice extend beyond AI transcriptions? . Techworld . 2019-03-01. 2020-07-02.
  10. Web site: From Your Mouth to Your Screen, Transcribing Takes the Next Step. NY Times . 2020-06-13. 2020-07-01.
  11. Web site: Whittaker . Zack . Otter, a popular new transcription app, raises privacy red flags . ZDNet . en . 2018-03-06. 2020-07-01.
  12. Web site: Kine. Phelim. 2022-02-16. My journey down the rabbit hole of every journalist's favorite app. 2022-02-16. POLITICO. en.
  13. https://techcrunch.com/2023/02/14/otter-ai-launches-otterpilot-its-new-ai-meeting-assistant/ Aisha Malik “Otter.ai launches OtterPilot, its new AI meeting assistant”, TechCrunch, 14 February 2023
  14. Web site: The best apps of 2018 . Mashable . 2018-12-15. 2020-07-01.
  15. Web site: The 25 best new apps of 2018 . Fast Company . 2018-12-20. 2020-07-02.
  16. Web site: DeepL Translate: The world's most accurate translator . 2023-06-29 . www.deepl.com . en.
  17. Web site: LanguageTool - Online Grammar, Style & Spell Checker . 2023-06-29 . LanguageTool . en.
  18. Web site: vidby for translation, dubbing and creation of subtitles service . 2023-06-29 . vidby.com . en.