Bleep Profanity
Nathan Maingard
Please please make this a thing!
Jesse Jackson
How can I Upvote this option? I think this would be awesome
R
Reese
Yup. Need this. Hard. I like to swear but I don't like to force people to listen to the words.
Mike G
This feature is needed. Just an easy way to Identify profanity words with a filter and bleep or just delete them all together - or just give the silent skip over treatment!
T
The Basement Hangout
100% this would make the tool even more useful. As it is, I need to export out of descript and back into adobe audition to add my beeps at the time stamp of the curse words that I manually searched for in descript. If descript had a dictionary of curse words and found them automagically and then let us add either a bleep or a delete, that would mean staying in descript and cutting a lot of manual editing.
Roxxy Love
I imagine it like this, you use Descript to search for curse words similar to filler words, then instead of using the apply all button to DELETE the word, you have the ability to REPLACE it with another sound file, like a BLEEP or a DUCK or any predefined or uploaded sound file (think SOUNDBOARDS). I think this feature would be greatly appreciated!
Andrew Mason
C
Cody Crabb
Just re-iterating how useful this would be. A couple of different "bleep" sounds would be all that was needed.
In my mind, this is how it would work: highlight the word or phrase, right click it, and then select "censor".
The censor would have to be a little bit smart—for example when censoring you need to leave enough that you can tell what the word is. So it would need to be something like f------k instead of JUST a bleep. Removing the vowels only would work!
D
Daniel Kim
Yes, please!
Kyle Lancaster
An option for "Profanity Filter" that users could turn on or off would be a great tool.
If switched on, the software would not transcribe profanity but instead insert "----".
It would certainly not auto-predict profanity. We've ran into issues with it inserting variations of the "n-word" into the captions of shows where that word, or variations of that word were not said.
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