Close Menu
Tech News VisionTech News Vision
  • Home
  • What’s On
  • Mobile
  • Computers
  • Gadgets
  • Apps
  • Gaming
  • How To
  • More
    • Web Stories
    • Global
    • Press Release

Subscribe to Updates

Get the latest tech news and updates directly to your inbox.

Trending Now
Review: iGarden Swim Jet X Pro 10

Review: iGarden Swim Jet X Pro 10

13 July 2026
Apple sues OpenAI over intellectual property theft

Apple sues OpenAI over intellectual property theft

13 July 2026
Why Mad Men Star Jon Hamm Wasn’t Right for the Role of Cole Phelps in LA Noire

Why Mad Men Star Jon Hamm Wasn’t Right for the Role of Cole Phelps in LA Noire

13 July 2026
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
  • Privacy
  • Terms
  • Advertise
  • Contact
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest VKontakte
Tech News VisionTech News Vision
  • Home
  • What’s On
  • Mobile
  • Computers
  • Gadgets
  • Apps
  • Gaming
  • How To
  • More
    • Web Stories
    • Global
    • Press Release
Tech News VisionTech News Vision
Home » Tech companies desperately want to film you doing chores
What's On

Tech companies desperately want to film you doing chores

News RoomBy News Room29 May 2026No Comments
Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
Tech companies desperately want to film you doing chores

This week, an AI training startup called Shift said it would clean New Yorkers’ homes for free. It has plans to expand into other cities as well, including London, and looking around my flat, I get the appeal.

But there’s a catch. There’s always a catch.

In exchange for the cleaning, Shift wants footage of its cleaners at work: scrubbing dishes, wiping counters, dusting tables, mopping floors. It wants everything. Video of all the boring domestic labor we’d happily outsource if we could — and that robotics companies are racing to teach machines to do so they can sell us something to do it for us.

That’s harder than it sounds. Unlike chatbots, image generators, and other AI tools that have exploded in recent years, robots have to deal with the physical world. That means understanding space, motion, force, friction, weird shapes and materials, awkward lighting, and everything else that humans — and other organics — tend to grasp instinctively. It’s why things that are generally easy for us, like folding clothes, picking up an apple, or pouring a glass of water, have proven so maddening for roboticists to codify.

Teaching machines to do those things takes data. Lots of it. Text, images, and videos could be easily scraped from the internet at an industrial scale. And they were, often without compensating the people who made them. The physical world is harder to scrape, and harder still to scrape quietly without paying for it. This means access to high-quality data is a massive bottleneck for companies developing physical AI. It’s a lucrative opportunity, so companies like Shift are getting creative.

They’re not alone. In India, recent reporting revealed that home services platform Pronto has been using clients’ homes as a source of AI training footage for chores like cooking, cleaning, and laundry. Pronto says it only records footage if customers explicitly opt in — it’s not clear what customers get in return, other than a copy of the footage — but the practice still set off a wave of backlash in the market, with rival startups insisting they have never recorded inside homes to train AI and have no plans to do so.

Other startups are focused on trying to scale data collection. Silicon Valley-based Human Archive, for example, hopes to partner with companies like Pronto and have gig workers record their activities using not-so-stylish camera caps. The hats collect footage from the wearer’s point of view, exactly the kind of “egocentric” or first-person data robotics companies need to teach machines how people navigate physical space. Shift, meanwhile, also taps consumers directly, and claims to have paid tens of thousands of people across 15 countries to record their activities through its app.

Some companies are skipping useful work altogether. Instead, workers are paid to complete the exact same physical tasks again and again while cameras and sensors can capture every movement. Such staged data farms are designed to turn rote physical activity — folding towels, picking up cups, carrying boxes — into AI training material valuable enough to justify paying people to create it.

And some data is generated by robots already out in the world. Despite the hype, true automation is still a long way away — hence the need for all this data — but companies are keen to ship products anyway. They’ll use data from customers’ homes to improve the product. Many companies rely on remote workers to step in when the robots inevitably get stuck. They’ll use that data too.

Of course, the act of trading data for something of value is not new. Companies have been offering discounts, convenience, and free services in exchange for access to your data for years, from loyalty cards and cookies to dashcams, insurance apps monitoring how people drive, and that heinous smart TV that’s always showing ads.

What’s new is the kind of data companies are willing to pay for. For now, that means maybe letting a human clean your home in a snazzy hat for free so that, eventually, a company can sell you a robot to do it instead.

Follow topics and authors from this story to see more like this in your personalized homepage feed and to receive email updates.

  • Robert Hart

    Robert Hart

    Posts from this author will be added to your daily email digest and your homepage feed.

    See All by Robert Hart

  • AI

    Posts from this topic will be added to your daily email digest and your homepage feed.

    See All AI

  • Report

    Posts from this topic will be added to your daily email digest and your homepage feed.

    See All Report

  • Robot

    Posts from this topic will be added to your daily email digest and your homepage feed.

    See All Robot

  • Tech

    Posts from this topic will be added to your daily email digest and your homepage feed.

    See All Tech

Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email

Related Posts

The Futility of Banning Killer Robots

The Futility of Banning Killer Robots

13 July 2026
6 Best Bidets of 2026: Toto, Brondell, More, All Tested in My Bathroom

6 Best Bidets of 2026: Toto, Brondell, More, All Tested in My Bathroom

13 July 2026
Waze is getting a bunch of new AI-powered features

Waze is getting a bunch of new AI-powered features

13 July 2026
Review: iGarden Swim Jet X Pro 10

Review: iGarden Swim Jet X Pro 10

13 July 2026
Editors Picks
The Futility of Banning Killer Robots

The Futility of Banning Killer Robots

13 July 2026
6 Best Bidets of 2026: Toto, Brondell, More, All Tested in My Bathroom

6 Best Bidets of 2026: Toto, Brondell, More, All Tested in My Bathroom

13 July 2026
Daredevil and The Defenders Star Wai Ching Ho Dies, Aged 83

Daredevil and The Defenders Star Wai Ching Ho Dies, Aged 83

13 July 2026
Waze is getting a bunch of new AI-powered features

Waze is getting a bunch of new AI-powered features

13 July 2026

Subscribe to Updates

Get the latest tech news and updates directly to your inbox.

Trending Now
Tech News Vision
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest Vimeo YouTube
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of use
  • Advertise
  • Contact
© 2026 Tech News Vision. All Rights Reserved.

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.