![]() ![]() By making crowd subtitling available for any YouTube creator, we’re allowing them to reach more viewers in more languages, improve their SEO, and enable anyone who is deaf or hard of hearing to enjoy their videos.”įor YouTube users, the functionality is simple. “Our goal is to make every video on the web accessible around the world,” said Dean Jansen, co-founder of Amara, “The only way to get millions of videos subtitled is if the viewers are invited to help. The new YouTube app launched today gives any YouTube user a crowdsourced translation and captioning system. For example, when Twitter launched its new photo filters feature last month, Twitter users translated the promo video into 20 languages in just two days. Amara’s customers include Netflix, Twitter, TED Talks, Khan Academy, Coursera, Udacity, and Google use Amara’s Enterprise services to build their own dedicated subtitling communities, notifying members each time a new video is posted. Amara is also launching a professional version of the feature for companies and organizations that want to take their channel global.Ī is an award-winning subtitle crowdsourcing platform, a ‘Wikipedia for subtitles’, with tens of thousands of volunteers working to caption and translate web videos from around the world. This is the first-ever subtitle crowdsourcing option available for free to YouTube users, letting them invite viewers to translate their videos into dozens of languages. ![]() NEW YORK, NY – Crowd-subtitling platform is today launching a free service that allows any personal YouTube creator to invite viewers to subtitle their videos and sync the subtitles to their YouTube account. First Ever Crowd Subtitles App for YouTube Launched by Įnables YouTube channels to invite their viewers to translate videos into dozens of languages for global distribution.
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