I thought that was a fake joke website but it’s real???
Comment on Big Tech Is Faking AI
Zrybew@lemmy.world 6 months ago
It’s not faking, it’s Mechanical Turk.
Reduce workforce to an API www.mturk.com
steal_your_face@lemmy.ml 6 months ago
Comment on Big Tech Is Faking AI
Zrybew@lemmy.world 6 months ago
It’s not faking, it’s Mechanical Turk.
Reduce workforce to an API www.mturk.com
I thought that was a fake joke website but it’s real???
micka190@lemmy.world 6 months ago
Man, I know people love to throw the word “dystopian” around, but holy shit is that description dystopian as fuck.
mrnarwall@lemmy.world 6 months ago
I used to do mechanical turk jobs for some quick and easy pocket money. There were several types of tasks you could do, and there was a sort of ranking system to dissuade anyone from just inputting junk instead of answering seriously. I usually stuck to surveys and things I would describe as fancy captchas. I recall a few jobs where the task was to record yourself in different environments reading the same script of text. I can’t see that type of job for being anything other than training data for AI/ML
afraid_of_zombies@lemmy.world 6 months ago
Audio testing? I was involved with a thing like that at one point. For a major telecom. Just a whole room of people of different accents reading the first page of the Great Gatsby and recording.
BakerBagel@midwest.social 6 months ago
Wait until you find out that Amazon pays foreign MTurk “employees” with Amazon vouchers instead of cash.
rottingleaf@lemmy.zip 6 months ago
I actually like the idea. Get simple jobs like quests in a game.
Still, there are issues.
oce@jlai.lu 6 months ago
If the revenues generated were fairly distributed, this system would not be a problem at all.
BreakDecks@lemmy.ml 6 months ago
I submitted a few weird requests to mturk just to see how it works. I was able to read a bunch of magazines for cheap by paying people $0.01 for every two scanned pages of any magazine that was no older than 3 editions old.
I ended up with a ton of random digitized magazines, and ended up learning a lot about the kinds of people who do mturk tasks from the magazines they scanned. Seems to mostly be bored housewives, at least 10 years ago when I did this.
I paid for my experiments with the ~$50 I earned from doing mturk tasks myself, and let me tell you, it was miserable stuff. Sub-minimum wage drudgery… At least I suffered myself what I made others suffer with my stupid tasks, and all I got out of it was a bunch of articles I didn’t actually want to read.