Let me guess… because they were all offshored from a “certain country” that we shall not speak of? And the PR would look bad??
Mediocre-Touch-6133 on
Anything but providing decent customer support and jobs located in the area where people are calling from. CEO needs another yacht.
Sensitive-Gas4339 on
Speaking to someone with a North American accent who can’t understand you, has incomprehensible grammar and gives poor service isn’t going to help. It’ll probably just make them seem more incompetent
TILTING_MOUNTAIN on
Will they use AI to prevent call drops?
Last week I’ve called several times to cancel my cable and it keeps dropping while I’m on hold. They don’t even call me back even if they confirmed my callback number. So frustrating.
669coolguy on
Seems morally repugnant
Woodworking-noob on
This may be the funniest headline I’ve ever read. Eat your heart out, Beaverton!
AdAnxious8842 on
Oh, what I wouldn’t give to get access to that AI and have some fun with different accents. Imagine what you could do with the AI program based on the information you had on the caller.
RampagingBadgers on
You could just run your shit from out of Canada.
stickscall on
These are the tawdry little dystopian details that I expect from high class literary fiction.
Obvious-Window8044 on
Telus is so freaking annoying, they call me at least twice a year trying to get me to switch. I ask them to stop calling and block them every time. They always phone from a new number, and it’s *always* a local number, so I end up picking up instead of screening it.
iatekane on
Article is paywalled:
The voice you hear on the other side of a call-centre interaction might soon sound a little more familiar, thanks to an AI tool that adjusts speech in real time – but not everyone thinks it’s a good idea.
Telus Digital, the wholly-owned division of Telus Corp.
[T-T](https://www.theglobeandmail.com/investing/markets/stocks/T-T/) +0.12%
responsible for customer experience and call centres, has deployed artificial-intelligence technology that alters the accent of customer-service agents.
In a post on the company’s website explaining the benefits of speech enhancement, Telus Digital says the technology, provided by a third-party company called Tomato.ai, uses speech-to-speech models to transform live audio.
It works by encoding the speaker’s voice, modifying pronunciation-related features, then decoding the speech back into audio, the company said.
“These models directly modify the acoustic features of speech, preserving the speaker’s voice while improving clarity and reducing accent-related friction,” the company wrote in its post. “This approach allows the solution to address mispronunciations without altering the speaker’s identity or emotional tone.”
Other companies that provide a similar feature say it helps speed up calls and help customers find solutions, while protecting service agents from harassment or discrimination.
Telus Digital provides the call-centre support for the company’s Canadian telecom subscribers, as well as other clients globally.
The company is already using the service internally, according to union representatives. It’s not clear whether the feature is yet being used in calls with telecom customers. The company did not respond to a request for comment.
The use of technology to alter the human voice is not itself new, and responds to a complaint among some callers who say it can be difficult to understand heavy foreign accents.
However, real-time accent alteration reflects a recent use of AI that is stirring debate, especially after a series of customer-service related job reductions in Canada within the telecom sector in recent years.
For labour representatives, the feature is another concern among many when it comes to the effects of AI on their members.
At a hearing before the parliamentary standing committee*** ***on industry and technology last week, Roch Leblanc, Unifor telecommunications director, called on government to require companies to inform Canadians when AI was being used.
He told members of Parliament that the union was aware of at least one Big Three telco using AI to mask the accents of offshore agents, “altering how customers perceive who they’re talking to.”
“The use of AI technology to deceive Canadians in any way should be prohibited,” he said.
United Steelworkers Local 1944 president Michael Phillips said he is aware of Telus using the technology internally, between agents based in Canada and overseas.
He said that he was informed by a B.C.-based Telus employee that they had spoken with an agent in the Philippines. According to that employee, “this overseas agent was laughing about it, turning the accent masker on and off, revealing their Filipino accent, and then, taking the accent away when they turned on the AI technology,” Mr. Phillips.
“As we’re trying to figure out what the parameters around AI and AI limitations are, I think that a very clear right that Canadians should insist on is the right to not be deceived by AI, especially not by folks that they are paying to provide telephone services for,” he said.
Eric Smith, senior vice-president at industry group Canadian Telecommunications Association – which does not represent Telus – said the focus should be on the outcomes of new AI tools, and whether they can improve operational efficiency to help keep costs down for Canadians, while doing so in a responsible way.
He said he is not familiar with the specific accent-altering technology being used, but that generally, telecom providers are exploring how artificial intelligence can be used to resolve issues more quickly, reduce waiting times and provide more consistent support across the various channels, he said.
“AI can play an important role in improving operational efficiency, which help keep keeps costs down for Canadians and consumers, and help support continued investment in building high quality networks,” he said.
Matthew Hatfield, director at OpenMedia, a non-profit that advocates for widespread and inexpensive internet access, said he was less concerned about the use of accent-masking technology itself than the fact that companies are “moving people away from humans as much as possible outside of these interactions.”
Whether to require the presence of humans in telecom customer interactions has become a complicated question. A few weeks ago, for instance, the telecom regulator required companies to implement a cancellation option online, so that customers would not be required to call in and speak with a representative to do so.
Chusten on
Is the A.I. going to help them understand me when I speak normally too?
SteveJobsBlakSweater on
I switched to Freedom during that last sale and the person setting me up on the phone was a normal guy working from home in Saskatchewan. It was surprising because that almost never happens anymore.
HanlonRazor on
I work for a company that does this. Sometimes the results are hilarious. But sometimes the customer thinks we are scammers and hangs up because the agent sounds like a soulless robot.
TurpitudeSnuggery on
I called a few times to get something sorted out last week. Everybody I spoke to was Indian.
Prophage7 on
It’s not the accent, it’s the lack of training. Having to explain what an IP address is to the support agent of an internet service provider is fucking insane.
hitchedodin on
as if anyone wouldn’t be able to tell from the grammar.
imaginary48 on
Anything and everything other than hiring Canadians
AntEaterApocalypse on
Best way to interact with Telus‘ customer support is to interact with them as little as possible.
21_ddub on
Pro tip, hit the French option and you will stay in country and they will likely help you in English if you said you hit the wrong button.
Consistent-Throat838 on
Lol maybe I’ll be able to finally understand the voice on the other end now. Ugh it’s so annoying asking them to repeat themselves 12 times.
Jotnotes1 on
I don’t think ‚Sorry to bother you‘ was meant to be aspirational.
ZmobieMrh on
Anything but hire Canadians. Call centres aren’t high skill, but those are 20-something dollar an hour jobs that are still needed in our economy. If our government was serious about jobs they’d be trying to get these things back on-shore.
Party-Disk-9894 on
Sorely needed!!
DataDude00 on
I can’t wait to hear someone ask me to “do the needful” with a francophone accent
TheDevler on
Tim Hortons is dying to get their hands on this technology for the drive through.
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26 Kommentare
Let me guess… because they were all offshored from a “certain country” that we shall not speak of? And the PR would look bad??
Anything but providing decent customer support and jobs located in the area where people are calling from. CEO needs another yacht.
Speaking to someone with a North American accent who can’t understand you, has incomprehensible grammar and gives poor service isn’t going to help. It’ll probably just make them seem more incompetent
Will they use AI to prevent call drops?
Last week I’ve called several times to cancel my cable and it keeps dropping while I’m on hold. They don’t even call me back even if they confirmed my callback number. So frustrating.
Seems morally repugnant
This may be the funniest headline I’ve ever read. Eat your heart out, Beaverton!
Oh, what I wouldn’t give to get access to that AI and have some fun with different accents. Imagine what you could do with the AI program based on the information you had on the caller.
You could just run your shit from out of Canada.
These are the tawdry little dystopian details that I expect from high class literary fiction.
Telus is so freaking annoying, they call me at least twice a year trying to get me to switch. I ask them to stop calling and block them every time. They always phone from a new number, and it’s *always* a local number, so I end up picking up instead of screening it.
Article is paywalled:
The voice you hear on the other side of a call-centre interaction might soon sound a little more familiar, thanks to an AI tool that adjusts speech in real time – but not everyone thinks it’s a good idea.
Telus Digital, the wholly-owned division of Telus Corp.
[T-T](https://www.theglobeandmail.com/investing/markets/stocks/T-T/) +0.12%
responsible for customer experience and call centres, has deployed artificial-intelligence technology that alters the accent of customer-service agents.
In a post on the company’s website explaining the benefits of speech enhancement, Telus Digital says the technology, provided by a third-party company called Tomato.ai, uses speech-to-speech models to transform live audio.
It works by encoding the speaker’s voice, modifying pronunciation-related features, then decoding the speech back into audio, the company said.
“These models directly modify the acoustic features of speech, preserving the speaker’s voice while improving clarity and reducing accent-related friction,” the company wrote in its post. “This approach allows the solution to address mispronunciations without altering the speaker’s identity or emotional tone.”
Other companies that provide a similar feature say it helps speed up calls and help customers find solutions, while protecting service agents from harassment or discrimination.
Telus Digital provides the call-centre support for the company’s Canadian telecom subscribers, as well as other clients globally.
The company is already using the service internally, according to union representatives. It’s not clear whether the feature is yet being used in calls with telecom customers. The company did not respond to a request for comment.
The use of technology to alter the human voice is not itself new, and responds to a complaint among some callers who say it can be difficult to understand heavy foreign accents.
However, real-time accent alteration reflects a recent use of AI that is stirring debate, especially after a series of customer-service related job reductions in Canada within the telecom sector in recent years.
For labour representatives, the feature is another concern among many when it comes to the effects of AI on their members.
At a hearing before the parliamentary standing committee*** ***on industry and technology last week, Roch Leblanc, Unifor telecommunications director, called on government to require companies to inform Canadians when AI was being used.
He told members of Parliament that the union was aware of at least one Big Three telco using AI to mask the accents of offshore agents, “altering how customers perceive who they’re talking to.”
“The use of AI technology to deceive Canadians in any way should be prohibited,” he said.
United Steelworkers Local 1944 president Michael Phillips said he is aware of Telus using the technology internally, between agents based in Canada and overseas.
He said that he was informed by a B.C.-based Telus employee that they had spoken with an agent in the Philippines. According to that employee, “this overseas agent was laughing about it, turning the accent masker on and off, revealing their Filipino accent, and then, taking the accent away when they turned on the AI technology,” Mr. Phillips.
“As we’re trying to figure out what the parameters around AI and AI limitations are, I think that a very clear right that Canadians should insist on is the right to not be deceived by AI, especially not by folks that they are paying to provide telephone services for,” he said.
Eric Smith, senior vice-president at industry group Canadian Telecommunications Association – which does not represent Telus – said the focus should be on the outcomes of new AI tools, and whether they can improve operational efficiency to help keep costs down for Canadians, while doing so in a responsible way.
He said he is not familiar with the specific accent-altering technology being used, but that generally, telecom providers are exploring how artificial intelligence can be used to resolve issues more quickly, reduce waiting times and provide more consistent support across the various channels, he said.
“AI can play an important role in improving operational efficiency, which help keep keeps costs down for Canadians and consumers, and help support continued investment in building high quality networks,” he said.
Matthew Hatfield, director at OpenMedia, a non-profit that advocates for widespread and inexpensive internet access, said he was less concerned about the use of accent-masking technology itself than the fact that companies are “moving people away from humans as much as possible outside of these interactions.”
Whether to require the presence of humans in telecom customer interactions has become a complicated question. A few weeks ago, for instance, the telecom regulator required companies to implement a cancellation option online, so that customers would not be required to call in and speak with a representative to do so.
Is the A.I. going to help them understand me when I speak normally too?
I switched to Freedom during that last sale and the person setting me up on the phone was a normal guy working from home in Saskatchewan. It was surprising because that almost never happens anymore.
I work for a company that does this. Sometimes the results are hilarious. But sometimes the customer thinks we are scammers and hangs up because the agent sounds like a soulless robot.
I called a few times to get something sorted out last week. Everybody I spoke to was Indian.
It’s not the accent, it’s the lack of training. Having to explain what an IP address is to the support agent of an internet service provider is fucking insane.
as if anyone wouldn’t be able to tell from the grammar.
Anything and everything other than hiring Canadians
Best way to interact with Telus‘ customer support is to interact with them as little as possible.
Pro tip, hit the French option and you will stay in country and they will likely help you in English if you said you hit the wrong button.
Lol maybe I’ll be able to finally understand the voice on the other end now. Ugh it’s so annoying asking them to repeat themselves 12 times.
I don’t think ‚Sorry to bother you‘ was meant to be aspirational.
Anything but hire Canadians. Call centres aren’t high skill, but those are 20-something dollar an hour jobs that are still needed in our economy. If our government was serious about jobs they’d be trying to get these things back on-shore.
Sorely needed!!
I can’t wait to hear someone ask me to “do the needful” with a francophone accent
Tim Hortons is dying to get their hands on this technology for the drive through.