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Video: AI – more ways it will revolutionise our industry

Posted on 12th June 2020 by Russell Trafford-Jones

Artificial Intelligence and Machine Learning (ML) dominate many discussions and for good reason, they usually reduce time and reduce costs. In the broadcast industry their are some obvious areas where it will, an already does, help. But what’s the time table? Where are we now? And what are we trying to achieve with the technology?

Edmundo Hoyle from TV Globo explains how they have managed to transform the thumbnail selection for their OTT service from a manual process taking an editor 15 minutes per video to an automated process using machine learning. A good thumbnail is relevant, it is a clear picture and has no nudity or weapons in it. Edmundo explains that they tackled this in a three-step process. The first step uses NLP analysis of the episode summary to understand what’s relevant and to match that with the subtitles (closed captions). Doing this identifies times int he video which should be examined more closely for thumbnails.

The durations identified by the process are then analysed for blur-free frames (amongst other metrics to detect clear videography) which gives them candidate pictures which may contain problematic imagery. the AWS service Rekognition which returns information regarding whether faces, guns or nudity are present in the frame. Edmundo finishes by showing the results which are, in general very positive. Final choice of thumbnails is still moderated by editors, but the process is much more streamlined because they are much less likely to have to find an image manually since the process selects 4 options. Edmundo finishes by explaining some of the chief causes of rejecting an image which are all relatively easy to improve upon and tend to be related to a person looking down or away from the camera.

We’ve seen before on The Broadcast Knowledge the idea of super-resolution which involves up-scaling images/video using machine learning. The result is better than using standard linear filters like lanczos. This is has been covered in a talk from Mux’s Nick Chadwick about LCEVC. Yiannis Andreopoulos from iSize talks next about the machine learning they use to improve video which uses some of these same principles to pre-treat, or as they call it ‘pre-code’ video before it’s encoded using a standard MPEG encoder (whether that be AVC, HEVC or the upcoming VVC). Yiannis explains how they are able to understand the best resolutions to encode at and scale the image intelligently appropriately. This delivers significant gains across all the metrics leading to bandwidth reduction. Furthermore he outlines a system which feeds back to maintain both the structure of the video which avoids it becoming too blurry which can be a consequence of being to subservient to the drive to reduce bitrate and thus simplifying the picture. It can also, though, protect itself from going too far down the sharpness path and only chasing metrics gains. He concludes by outlining future plans.

Grant Franklin Totten then steps up to explain how Al Jazeera have used AI/machine learning to help automate editorial compliance processes. He introduces the idea of ‘Contextual Video Metadata’ which ads a level of context to what would otherwise be stand-alone metadata. To understand this, we need to learn more about what Al Jazeera is trying to achieve.

As a news organisation, Al Jazeera has many aspects of reporting to balance. They are particularly on the look out for bias, good fact-checking & fake news. In order to support this, they are using AI and machine learning. They have both textual and video-based methods of detecting fake news. As an example of their search for bias, they have implemented voice detection and analysed MP’s speech time in Ireland. Irish law requires equal speaking time, yet Al Jazeera can easily show that some MPs get far more time than others. Another challenge is detecting incorrect on-screen text with the example given of naming Trump as Obama by accident on a lower-third graphic. Using OCR, NLP and Face recognition, they can flag issues with the hope the they can be corrected before Tx. In terms of understanding, for example, who is president, Al Jazeera is in the process of refining the Knowledge graph to capture the information they need to check against.

AI and machine learning (ML) aren’t going anywhere. This talk shines a light on two areas where it’s particularly helpful in broadcast. You can count on hearing significant improvements in AI and ML’s effectiveness in the next few years and it’s march into other parts of the workflow.
Watch now!
Speakers

Edmundo Hoyle Edmundo Hoyle
TV System Researcher
TV Globo
Yiannis Andreopoulos Yiannis Andreopoulos
Technical Director,
iSize Technologies
Grant Franklin Totten Grant Franklin Totten
Head of Media & Emerging Platforms,
Al Jazeera Media Networks

Edmundo Hoyle (GLOBO), Yiannis Andreopoulos (iSize Technologies) and Grant Totten (Al Jazeera Media Network).

Video AI, Al Jazeera, Edmundo Hoyle, Globo, Grant Franklin Totten, iSize Technologies, Machine Learning, metadata, V-Nova, Yiannis Andreopoulos

Webinar: Why data-driven OTT will overtake the Broadcast TV model – The TV Data Revolution

Posted on 27th April 2020 by Russell Trafford-Jones

‘On demand’ must be the top reason people love streaming services. But for streaming providers, the motivation to deliver these services goes deeper than meeting market demand; The data that can be gathered as people watch is revolutionising business models.

Eyevinn Technology, the Swedish specialist consultancy firm focused on video and distribution brings this data into the spotlight tomorrow, Tuesday 28th, to discuss how different segments of the industry are using the data and why you should have a data strategy. This virtual panel brings together AWS, Braze, Edgeware, Eyevinn Technology, Jump TV, and Kaltura that will shed light on the
benefits you can get having a compelling data strategy.

“I believe we have gathered a very interesting combination of speakers and I can promise an insightful hour with a lot of good takeaways”

Magnus Svensson, VP Sales and Business Development at Eyevinn Technology

We see the evidence of the power of this data in the EULAs for Smart TVs which make it clear that they are watching you. Famously, North American TV Manufacturer Vizio was caught collecting “as many as 100 billion data points each day from millions of TVs,” according to the US FTC. This resulted in a class action suit and a judgement against Vizio.

This virtual panel looks at collecting data in the right way, discussing what data to collect and how to motivate subscribers to share their data. Importantly in today’s global society which needs to serve very privacy-conscious countries, there will be discussion about how to use the data that has been collected. They’ll be looking at how can data be used to understand how to scale your OTT solution, how can data be used to make the experience better and how can data be used to increase engagement and reduce churn.

Register now!

 

Speakers

Johan Bolin Johan Bolin
Chief Product and Technology Officer,
Edgeware
Gideon Gilboa Gideon Gilboa
Marketing and Solutions – Media and Telecom,
Kaltura
Jerónimo Macanás

 

Jerónimo Macanás
CEO,
Jump Data-Driven Video
Warrick Godfrey Warrick Godfrey
VP, Industry Solutions,
Braze
Simon Frost Simon Frost
Head of EMEA Media Marketing,
Amazon Web Services (AWS)
Magnus Svensson Magnus Svensson
Media Solution Specialist,
Eyevinn
Webinar Amazon Web Services, AWS, Braze, Edgeware, Eyevinn Technology, Gideon Gilboa, Jerónimo Macanás, Johan Bolin, JUMP-Data-Driven Video, Kaltura, Magnus Svensson, metadata, OTT, Simon Frost, streaming, Warrick Godfrey

Webinar: Defeating Show-verload Using AI-enabled Content Management and Metadata Enrichment

Posted on 5th December 2018 by Russell Trafford-Jones


Date: Wednesday 12th December, 2018. 11:30am ET / 16:30 GMT

Data gives information. Metadata gives the context. TV and video service providers are struggling to manage all the content and metadata required to meet consumer’s growing demand for more relevant and personalised content on any screen, anytime-anywhere. Join the upcoming webinar on AI for Content Management and Metadata Enrichment and learn how you can use AI-powered metadata to drive revenues and increase user engagement.

Presented by SeaChange, DiveTV, OTT Executive Summit & Magazine, and Trender Research.

Speakers

Sharique Husain Sharique Husain
Co-founder, CBO,
DIVE
Brian Mahony Brian Mahony
OTT Video Executive Magazine,
Trender Research
Frank He Frank He
Senior Director, Solutions Architecture
Sea Change
Webinar AI, Asset Management, Brian Mahony, DIVE, Frank He, metadata, OTT, OTT Video Executive, SeaChange, Sharique Husain, Trender Resdearch

Video: Spectral Quality – Improving Colors to Improve Videos

Posted on 11th September 2018 by Russell Trafford-Jones

Vimeo’s Vittorio Giovara discusses ways to improve viewer retention by improving videos paying attention to colour space and colour volume. This talk covers how and why High Dynamic Range (HDR) works, Wide Color Gamut (WCG), 10-bit vs 8-bit video and also discusses the importance of frame rate on viewer retention.

After all, 4K has gotten most of the headlines, but there are other ways to improve the quality of your streaming video that have even more visual impact. This talk explores video colorimetry, ranging from video quality concepts to the latest trends in the industry. Vimeo’s experience is used as a practical implementation example and showcases how new compression technologies are deployed for the benefit of creators and their audiences.

This isn’t just about pretty videos, Vittorio shows the economic benefits of producing a better product.

Watch now!

Video ARIB STV-B67, BT. 2020, BT.REC 709, Colour, Colour Spaces, Colour Volume, HDR, HDR10, HFR, HLG, metadata, P3, PQ, ST 2084, ST 2094, Streaming Media East, Vimeo, Vittorio Giovara, WCG

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