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1. MattGa+(OP)[view] [source] 2024-05-23 06:13:37
> with a unique voice

Is your voice truly unique out of the 8 billion out there in the world? Nobody could plausibly pass as you?

replies(1): >>numpad+T6
2. numpad+T6[view] [source] 2024-05-23 07:11:26
>>MattGa+(OP)
There are only 330m US Americans. Just having American throat development patterns narrow you down to a group of less than 4% of population, and it only goes down from there - e.g. PNW has only 13m people total, half that by gender, that makes someone from there belonging to a group of 0.08% of the world.

You might think voice is something you're born with. It's not, it rather partially comes from languages and your backgrounds. So random chances of someone literally sounding by DNA from half a world away is quite low.

replies(1): >>gambit+fc
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3. gambit+fc[view] [source] [discussion] 2024-05-23 07:55:22
>>numpad+T6
You're talking about literal identical voice due to throat development and cultural background etc - which is obviously technically true, but I imagine a number of people who sound 99% like you(where a casual listener can't tell the difference) must be quite large.

Case in point - my wife has two twin brothers. Even though I've been interacting with them for over 10 years now, they sound exactly the same to me. If I close my eyes then there is zero chance I could tell them apart by voice alone. I know, it's an anecdote - but while I'm sure you could tell them apart by some really small thing that they do, to someone who isn't actively looking for those cues they are - for all intentions and purposes - the same.

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