AI Has a Dirty Little Secret: It's Powered by People

Advertisement
By Associated Press | Updated: 6 March 2018 18:31 IST

There's a dirty little secret about artificial intelligence: It's powered by hundreds of thousands of real people.

From makeup artists in Venezuela to women in conservative parts of India, people around the world are doing the digital equivalent of needlework -drawing boxes around cars in street photos, tagging images, and transcribing snatches of speech that computers can't quite make out.

Such data feeds directly into "machine learning" algorithms that help self-driving cars wind through traffic and let Alexa figure out that you want the lights on. Many such technologies wouldn't work without massive quantities of this human-labelled data.

Advertisement

These repetitive tasks pay pennies apiece. But in bulk, this work can offer a decent wage in many parts of the world - even in the US And it underpins a technology that could change humanity forever: AI that will drive us around, execute verbal commands without flaw, and - possibly - one day think on its own.

For more than a decade, Google has used people to rate the accuracy of its search results. More recently, investors have poured tens of millions of dollars into startups like Mighty AI and CrowdFlower, which are developing software that makes it easier to label photos and other data, even on smartphones.

Venture capitalist S. "Soma" Somasegar says he sees "billions of dollars of opportunity" in servicing the needs of machine learning algorithms. His firm, Madrona Venture Group, invested in Mighty AI. Humans will be in the loop "for a long, long, long time to come," he says.

Advertisement

Accurate labelling could make the difference between a self-driving car distinguishing between the sky and the side of a truck - a distinction Tesla's Model S failed in the first known fatality involving self-driving systems in 2016.

"We're not building a system to play a game, we're building a system to save lives," says Mighty AI CEO Daryn Nakhuda.

Advertisement

Marjorie Aguilar, a 31-year-old freelance makeup artist in Maracaibo, Venezuela, spends four to six hours a day drawing boxes around traffic objects to help train self-driving systems for Mighty AI.

She earns about 50 cents an hour, but in a crisis-wracked country with runaway inflation, just a few hours' work can pay a month's rent in bolivars.

Advertisement

"It doesn't sound like a lot of money, but for me it's pretty decent," she says. "You can imagine how important it is for me getting paid in US dollars."

Aria Khrisna, a 36-year-old father of three in Tegal, Indonesia, says that adding word tags to clothing pictures on websites such as eBay and Amazon pays him about $100 a month, roughly half his income.

And for 25-year-old Shamima Khatoon, her job annotating cars, lane markers and traffic lights at an all-female outpost of data-labelling company iMerit in Metiabruz, India, represents the only chance she has to work outside the home in her conservative Muslim community.

"It's a good platform to increase your skills and support your family," she says.

The benefits of greater accuracy can be immediate. At InterContinental Hotels Group, every call that its digital assistant Amelia can take from a human saves $5 to $10, says information technology director Scot Whigham.

When Amelia fails, the program listens while a call is rerouted to one of about 60 service desk workers. It learns from their response and tries the technique out on the next call, freeing up human employees to do other things.

When a computer can't make out a customer call to the Hyatt Hotels chain, an audio snippet is sent to AI-powered call centre Interactions in an old brick building in Franklin, Massachusetts. There, while the customer waits on the phone, one of a roomful of headphone-wearing "intent analysts" transcribes everything from misheard numbers to profanity and quickly directs the computer how to respond.

That information feeds back into the system. "Next time through, we've got a better chance of being successful," says Robert Nagle, Interactions' chief technology officer.

Researchers have tried to find workarounds to human-labelled data, often without success.

In a project that used Google Street View images of parked cars to estimate the demographic makeup of neighbourhoods, then-Stanford researcher Timnit Gebru tried to train her AI by scraping Craigslist photos of cars for sale that were labelled by their owners.

But the product shots didn't look anything like the car images in Street View, and the program couldn't recognise them. In the end, she says, she spent $35,000 to hire auto dealer experts to label her data.

Trevor Darrell, a machine learning expert at the University of California Berkeley, says he expects it will be five to 10 years before computer algorithms can learn to perform without the need for human labelling. His group alone spends hundreds of thousands of dollars a year paying people to annotate images.

 

For the latest tech news and reviews, follow Gadgets 360 on X, Facebook, WhatsApp, Threads and Google News. For the latest videos on gadgets and tech, subscribe to our YouTube channel. If you want to know everything about top influencers, follow our in-house Who'sThat360 on Instagram and YouTube.

Further reading: Science, Apps, AI, ML
Advertisement

Related Stories

Popular Mobile Brands
  1. OnePlus 15 Launch Date Announced; OnePlus Ace 6 to Debut Alongside
  2. iQOO 15 With Snapdragon 8 Elite Gen 5 SoC to Launch in India in November
  3. Vivo Announces OriginOS 6 for Vivo and iQOO Handsets Globally
  4. iPad Pro With M5 Chip, OLED Display Launched in India at This Price
  5. Oppo Find X9 Series Could Launch in India on This Date
  6. iQOO Neo 11 Launch, Design Teased; Pre-Reservations Begin Ahead of Debut
  7. Oppo Find X9 Series, Oppo Pad 5 Launching Today: All You Need to Know
  8. Kishkindhapuri OTT Release: Telugu Horror Film to Release ZEE5 Soon
  9. Honor Magic 8, Magic 8 Pro With Snapdragon 8 Elite Gen 5 Launched: See Price
  10. IISc–Caltech Team Cracks a 60-Year Mystery Behind Photosynthesis
  1. Apple Vision Pro Refreshed With M5 Chipset and New Dual Knit Band: Price, Specifications
  2. Apple M5 Chipset Launched With 4X Faster GPU for MacBook Pro, iPad Pro and Vision Pro
  3. Google Chrome, Microsoft Edge Security Flaws: CERT-In Asks Users to Update to Latest Versions With Security Fixes
  4. OnePlus 15 Launch Date Announced; OnePlus Ace 6 to Debut Alongside
  5. iQOO 15 India Launch Timeline Confirmed: Expected Specifications, Features
  6. Dyson Purifier Cool PC1 – TP11 Launched in India With HEPA Filtration, Smart Controls: Price, Features
  7. Realme GT 8 Pro Colour Options, Specifications Teased; Realme Reveals GT 8 Chipset, Camera Details
  8. Vivo Announces Android 16-Based OriginOS 6 Globally With Origin Animation, AI Features: Release Timeline
  9. Redmi K90, Redmi K90 Pro Max Set for China Launch in October; Teased to Be Priced Under Rs. 50,000
  10. Scientists Solve Decades-Old Photosynthesis Puzzle With IISc–Caltech Study
Gadgets 360 is available in
Download Our Apps
Available in Hindi
© Copyright Red Pixels Ventures Limited 2025. All rights reserved.