grillman It isn't full time, but seriously if any of you comrades out there have a laptop or desktop (somehow AI isn't caught up on the whole mobile / tablet update from the last decade yet) it's something.

Maybe even programming-communism

Whats even funnier is they use cell phones in their recuutment webpage examples. But if you want to suck some cash from tech bros here's the link

  • SorosFootSoldier [he/him, they/them]
    ·
    20 days ago

    "Bleach is healthy and safe to drink"

    Pass

    "You can milk bumblebees for gasoline"

    Pass

    "Barack Obama hosts the Daily Show"

    Pass

    Easiest $22 an hour I've ever made.

  • corgiwithalaptop [any, love/loves]M
    ·
    20 days ago

    I do this for $15 an hour with Outlier and its something. Can confirm to those curious, they do pay weekly, I got $70 last week and did a whole bunch more the past few days, so should have a chunk coming this week. If you don't see me making a big post pissing and moaning about it then its legit.

  • tamagotchicowboy [he/him]
    ·
    20 days ago

    If you can speed read can confirm this is the easiest job ever. If you don't get into one or get booted there's lionbridge, telus, outlier, dataannotation, welocalize, etc. The exams between them are fairly similar (and tell you all the issues with modern search engines and AI that aren't getting fixed anytime soon because that's asking way too much competence out of capital). Some make you specialize, others you're a generalist in what questions you answer.

    For downsides sometimes they're looking for workers only in certain states/countries and they pretty much own your phone data, I'd highly HIGHLY recommend using a burner gmail to apply rather than your real one since they make you look up all sorts of things, even fucked up shit, in every language known to <insert search engine or AI here> and it totally hoses your algo. The work comes and goes in spurts, you can go weeks with no projects/tasks around and its super bad during the holidays, prepare for 0 income then if this is your only gig. It's also fickle work, they let people go to meet quotas or just because they can, so again not good to rely on this as your sole source of income. Sure, that's any job, but here being virtual there's no context clues/warning given. They like to keep turnover/firing rate sky high one for the obvious to keep wages low, but two the sillies think it mimics real learning when there's quite a bit more to it than that. You may do a lot of work and suddenly a glitch and they don't credit you or you get fired and aren't compensated.

    Last thing to beware of, and important is careful how you look these up, there's a lot of copy cats that are simply fully fake. Check on reddits dedicated to the particular data rater job/ratracerebellion for reliable links.

  • supafuzz [comrade/them]
    ·
    20 days ago

    If this is their strategy for training a closer correlation to reality for the models' hallucinations (the models are never not hallucinating; sometimes they track with consensus reality but this is just as much a statistical accident as when they don't) then, uh, good luck I guess, it seems like they'd need to accurately tag a truly insane number of outputs which is going to require a level of fluent, idiomatic literacy that costs money

  • AlicePraxis [any]
    ·
    20 days ago

    I searched project aralia out of curiousity and this was the first result...

    https://www.reddit.com/r/WorkOnline/comments/1d0rmml/kicked_out_of_appen_project_aralia_a_day_after/

  • Llituro [he/him, they/them]
    ·
    20 days ago

    I have a friend who just finished their PhD who's currently doing some gig work where he bullies chatgpt about how it sucks at math. The pay is decent for what it is, but that's certainly largely because of the amount of degree he can show them.

  • umbrella@lemmy.ml
    ·
    edit-2
    20 days ago

    thats pretty good money ngl i want to do this

    do they give you consistent hours?

    • tamagotchicowboy [he/him]
      ·
      20 days ago

      Not really. One week I may be lucky to get 1 hr in another I can do 30. Depending on the company they usually have some set minimum hours a week, for some its as low as 5 for others its 20, they're usually more flexible on minimum hours if there's no work to be had. I've been working at one of the places about a year and its not at all consistent minus holidays, then its absolutely nothing guaranteed.