TikTok can use AI to turn your long video into short ones
Briefly

TikTok can use AI to turn your long video into short ones
"While it works with videos that are longer than a minute, TikTok suggests it's useful for long podcast recordings or videos captured throughout an entire day by a wearable camera. You select what parts of the video you want turned into shorter clips and Smart Split will handle the rest including choosing the length, generating captions, and even reframing content vertically."
"AI Outline is a tool designed to be used before anything is even recorded. As the name implies it uses AI to generate an outline for a video based on a prompt or by selecting a highly searched topic on the platform. The outline includes automatically generated video titles, hashtags, hooks, and script ideas, which creators can edit and refine to match their own style."
"TikTok creators who offer a subscription fee that provides access to perks like exclusive content currently receive 70 percent of TikTok's revenue share after fees. But creators who meet criteria including having at least 10,000 followers, 100,000 views in the last month, and who posted at least three subscription-only videos last month, will be able to unlock extra monthly rewards boosting their revenue share to up to 90 percent."
TikTok released three creator-focused features: Smart Split, AI Outline, and updated subscription revenue incentives. Smart Split automatically converts long recordings into shorter clips, selects lengths, generates captions, and reframes footage vertically, and is available globally via TikTok Studio Web. AI Outline generates pre-production outlines, video titles, hashtags, hooks, and script ideas from prompts or trending topics, and allows creators to edit the results; it is initially available to creators over 18 in the US, Canada, and select markets with a wider rollout planned. Eligible creators meeting follower, view, and posting thresholds can raise subscription revenue share from 70 percent up to 90 percent.
Read at The Verge
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