Voice Transcription and Identification for Tactical Radio Networks
Voice transcription and identification require libraries that are often only available on public networks and require transmission of sound information to external sources.
Effective transcription requires the improvement of "base models" for voice data, and the addition of known vocabulary rules.
Miltary voice radio operator procedures encourage standardized vocabulary, code-words, brevity codes and control behaviors that are uniquely comaptible with voice transcription.
Obstacles for the military use-case include maintaining internal, unconnected transcription libraries which use base models and learning data that are also isolated to the network they are maintained and operated on.
Speaker identification is useful for allowing voice radio operators to participate on text chat networks. Multi-factor authentication is required to augment this tool so that voice operators have verified "Presence" authentication on XMPP chat networks.
All of these capabilities can be achieved with a cell phone or micro-computer connected to a radio on any voice tactical network.