Twitter finally rolls out auto-captions for voice tweets
From now on, Twitter users will be able to add captions to their voice tweets.
The advance is long-awaited since the launch of the audio function, and underscores the social network’s commitment to accessibility.
Twitter users have been waiting a year to see captions come to voice tweets.
The platform announced last week via the Twitter Support account that captions would finally be rolling out for the voice tweet function.
From now on, users will be able to choose to enable automatic captioning for their audio.
While only users of the iOS Twitter application can currently create voice tweets, captions will be available for several languages.
Twitter announced the new function will be available in English, Japanese, Spanish, Portuguese, Turkish, Arabic, Hindi, Indonesian, Korean, Italian and French.
To activate the option, simply click the “CC” icon in the righthand corner of the voice tweet window to launch captions, which are automatically generated when an audio message is recorded.
Only new voice tweets will be able to benefit from this new accessibility feature.
Now when you record a voice Tweet, captions will automatically generate and appear.
Recently, Twitter has been announcing various new functions, as well as calling time on its “stories” format, Fleets.
This new captions function lands well after TikTok rolled out automatic captions to videos in April, as part of a wider strategy to make the platform more inclusive for deaf people or users with hearing impairments.
Instagram said it was working on captions for stories back in May.
In September 2020, Twitter said that it hoped to provide audio transcription for the beginning of 2021.
To this end, Twitter will create two new teams working on inclusivity and accessibility on the platform. –