Entwickler glauben, dass die Einspeisung von First-Person-Filmmaterial in spezielle KI-Modelle Robotern dabei helfen wird, menschliches Verhalten nachzuahmen

    https://www.aljazeera.com/gallery/2026/6/11/photos-indias-workers-are-training-ai-robots-to-take-their-jobs

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    1. From the article 

      With a smartphone strapped to her head, Indian housewife Nagireddy Sriramyachandra films herself slicing mangoes to train artificial intelligence-powered robots to take on household tasks in the future.

      Earning 250 rupees ($2.6) for one hour of video, her mundane recordings are invaluable for global tech companies teaching machines how to move like humans in the real world.

      The 25-year-old is one of a growing army of thousands of AI system trainers in the world’s most populous country.

      “Who else will give you 250 rupees an hour just for doing housework?” asked Sriramyachandra from her kitchen in Chennai, the capital city of the southern Indian state of Tamil Nadu.

      “I may get a robot myself in the future,” she added.

    2. CutiePopIceberg on

      O it s not just india. It s eveywhere. If you use ai in your job youre training it to replace you.

    3. This is quite dystopian in a capitalist system. However, it may be utopian (without being misused by tech elites, ultra-rich, etc) when it benefits vulnerable sections of people in developing countries such as those suffering from serious/chronic health issues, old age, disabilities, toxic relatives, controlling societies, single spouses, women, men, and many others, who don’t want to take risks with domestic helpers, caregivers or nurses for regular tasks and day-to-day needs of caregiving, domestic works, washing, ironing, cleaning (mopping or dusting), healthcare needs, and so on. Unfortunately, the dystopian outcomes seem more likely.

    4. BrahmKarmaGato on

      Til that daily chores like folding cloths and washing dishes are only done by Indians.

    5. Spirited-Sir-3034 on

      I’m fine with training robots as long as they eventually take over the laundry

    6. People have commented before that the data collection later with advanced smart glasses for workers will be astronomical.

      One scenario I’ve seen mentioned before is sewing machine setups. With thousands of workers they could generate millions of hours of data fairly trivially. 1000 workers * 8 hours per day * 2 shifts of workers * 365 days = 5.8 million hours of footage. Which honestly is overkill for building a model, but it points out how a company could gather that data rapidly to then work with an AI robotics company. We’re talking about industries in say Vietnam where such robotics could gradually threaten 1.5 million jobs. That’s just one example.

    7. Affectionate-Tip-164 on

      I wonder when would robots be trained to rub one out.

      It would be very interesting indeed, and the liabilities as well I guess.

    8. That’s the future they want for us and with no basic income for everyone in sight (and even of we’ll get It would be Just enough to not starve) i wonder what the life will be in 10 years. Facts are two: they know we wont move a finger and starve or they have bigger plans

    9. that’s a very very weird way of saying “AI companies exploit the vulnerable to train AI that will replace them”

    10. Nice_Anybody2983 on

      Not theirs, yet. You need to be more expensive than a robot to be replaced. 

    11. Using first-person footage for imitation learning is a massive leap for dexterity, but it raises huge questions about how these workers will be compensated for the data they’re providing. Will these people eventually be replaced by the very models they’re refining?

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