The longer I spend in "dependency hell" trying to install RVC on Linux Mint, the more it feels like a parable of the market forces behind "AI" (which is to say I'd like some help setting up Pyenv)
The longer I spend in "dependency hell" trying to install RVC on Linux Mint, the more it feels like a parable of the market forces behind "AI" (which is to say I'd like some help setting up Pyenv)
The story thus far by my recollection:
I'm trying to get Retrieval-based Voice Conversion (RVC) — a program for making voice "deepfakes" using audio-to-audio conversion — working on my Linux Mint Xfce machine. To this end, I've had to...
And this isn't to mention how every single step of this process has also had its own hiccups and confusions, as I'm "diving in the deep end" with basically no knowledge of anything I'm doing.
Put simply, it feels like all the forces of the universe are conspiring against me, trying to keep me from installing this one simple program onto my computer.
Compare this to another form of machine learning technology: large language models. Those things are everywhere nowadays! They're practically inescapable! They're in Google and DuckDuckGo. Firefox even on Linux has an LLM feature now. Several mainstream social media apps have them. Windows has its Copilot, phones are getting "AI" features left and right, yadda yadda. And I'm sure you all know everything wrong with the mass adoption of LLMs already.
Put simply, it feels like all the forces of the universe are conspiring against me, trying to make it impossible for me to stay away from this crap I absolutely don't want.
And this raises the question of why, if both of these things are popularly called "AI", do they differ so much in this regard?
The answer to me seems to just be money. RVC has no subscription fee nor gathering of my personal data, certainly not on a privacy-friendly OS; contrarily RVC makes me more private by letting me mask my voice. RVC is also literally incapable of even attempting to influence my opinions or dull my mind; it does not rely on overseas server farms whose water use is leaving surrounding communities without tap water; and I could even swap out RVC's training material if I objected to it. And without these "features", it's basically impossible for anyone to make a profit from RVC. And if it's impossible to make a profit from RVC, then there's no money being put into making this incredibly useful program accessible for laypeople — certainly no money being put into forcing it on people!
And I just think that's some glorpshit.