Updated
Updated · Bitcoin.com News · Jun 16
Indian Workers Film Robot-Training Data for $2.40 an Hour as Humanoid Market Eyes $38 Billion
Updated
Updated · Bitcoin.com News · Jun 16

Indian Workers Film Robot-Training Data for $2.40 an Hour as Humanoid Market Eyes $38 Billion

3 articles · Updated · Bitcoin.com News · Jun 16

Summary

  • 250 rupees an hour — about $2.40 — is what Indian workers are paid to record first-person videos of chores like slicing mangos, tying shoes and making coffee for AI training datasets.
  • Objectways and Humyn Lab convert that head-mounted smartphone footage into labeled "egocentric" data that teaches robots and assistants how hands move, what people intend and how tasks unfold in real settings.
  • Goldman Sachs estimates the humanoid-robot market could reach $38 billion by 2035, making cheap, diverse real-world behavior data increasingly valuable to robotics teams, including U.S. tech clients.
  • Privacy and pay-equity concerns shadow the work because filming often happens in homes and factory floors, while workers question data retention, licensing and whether one-time wages fairly reflect future commercial use.

Insights

As AI learns from $2.40/hour labor, who owns the multi-billion dollar intelligence being created?
Are Indian workers training their own replacements for a future that will leave them behind?
With synthetic data emerging, is filming inside homes the only way to teach robots about our world?