TE
科技回声
首页24小时热榜最新最佳问答展示工作
GitHubTwitter
首页

科技回声

基于 Next.js 构建的科技新闻平台,提供全球科技新闻和讨论内容。

GitHubTwitter

首页

首页最新最佳问答展示工作

资源链接

HackerNews API原版 HackerNewsNext.js

© 2025 科技回声. 版权所有。

How much money can you make on Mechanical Turk?

151 点作者 Steven-Clarke将近 6 年前

24 条评论

ptero将近 6 年前
The person described is a "senior business analyst", reportedly making good money, but decides to work on MTurk, doing menial tasks, to help offset extra costs (diapers, etc.) of a baby that was born. This sounds insane to me. Almost anything else sounds better: reduce expenses, figure out if he can get more responsibilities and a raise, even get a low % credit to pay for those diapers for a year, etc. . Is this just me? This is an honest question.
评论 #20439513 未加载
评论 #20439014 未加载
评论 #20441273 未加载
评论 #20439227 未加载
评论 #20438911 未加载
评论 #20438673 未加载
评论 #20444662 未加载
评论 #20441121 未加载
评论 #20441448 未加载
Phemist将近 6 年前
Fun anecdote about some of my own dabblings in online psych experiments and MTurk.<p>7 or 8 years ago, my then supervisor and I experimented with running psychological (behavioural) experiments on MTurk. We had created a method that would run in browsers in native javascript and were looking to validate it. Coming from a testing-1st-year-psych-students-in-the-basement-of-the-faculty-building kind of thing, we naively took what the going wage was for that (something like 8 euros&#x2F;hour), and put an experiment online that would take around 20 min to complete, and paid 2 euros.<p>My supervisor used his own credit card and set the spend limit to around 1000 euros; thinking that we&#x27;d never hit it. Boy how wrong were we. Apparently this 6 euro&#x2F;hour wage was _much_ _much_ higher than the going rate, and we hit the spend limit in around 2 hours. Even though we had to throw out around 70% of the completions, we ended up with usable data from around 150 participants.<p>We went in expecting to run the experiment for a week or 2, and get maybe 50 participants, but came out with 500 in a span of 2 hours. Safe to say, we celebrated a job well done that night over one or two drinks. People were commenting on how nice of a change of pace it was compared to the then-usual MTurk tasks and that they would have done it for free. Some even left their e-mail addresses should we run another online experiment. I&#x27;ve since been out of the field of online behavioural experimentation, but it seems to have taken off quite a bit.
评论 #20443135 未加载
neilv将近 6 年前
A few years ago, a friend of mine, in her 20s, worked full-time as a technician in a university-affiliated research lab, she managed to find a steal of a studio apartment (half the price of a bottom-end one-bedroom in the neighborhood), and she bought awful cheap bulk food... but money was still so tight that, in the evening, when she was too tired to do anything else, she did these online &quot;gigs&quot; that paid only $1-$2 an hour.<p>Since she could write, she mostly did writing assignments (which I suspected were for SEO Web sites), in which they tell you a topic and how many words to write, you research and write the article, and you get paid a pittance. But $2 will buy steel-cut oats for the day.<p>Her time should&#x27;ve been worth more than $1-$2&#x2F;hour, and I don&#x27;t like the idea of companies arguably exploiting desperate people this way. Though it&#x27;s not just companies: university researchers sometimes use Mechanical Turk workers to process data, and as research subjects.
评论 #20442505 未加载
评论 #20442310 未加载
dgivney将近 6 年前
A somewhat interesting article which strongly turns into a puff piece of MT. I started scrolling to the bottom to find out who was paying for this content and there it was &quot;In his book, Side Hustle From Home: How To Make Money Online With Amazon Mechanical Turk&quot;..<p>I wonder just how does he manage a new baby, a side hustle that fills every minute with productive money-making and writing a book!.. The author really should be writing a book about his exceptional time management skills instead.
评论 #20440336 未加载
评论 #20439957 未加载
blintz将近 6 年前
How do people feel about the research ethics of this? Many academic studies involve the use of MTurk participants, but it seems as though they are not being paid close to a living or even fair wage ($2 an hour is abysmal!).<p>Should universities require that studies using MTurk pay some minimum pro-rated hourly wage? That is, if a Stanford HCI study (which seem to use MTurk often) wants workers to fill out a 15-minute survey, they would need to pay at least $8 an hour (so $2).<p>I’ve been to thesis defenses at Stanford where researchers have explicitly stated that they chose to use MTurk because they can pay workers far less than locally recruited participants.
评论 #20439562 未加载
评论 #20440560 未加载
评论 #20440675 未加载
评论 #20440524 未加载
评论 #20439419 未加载
评论 #20439498 未加载
评论 #20439537 未加载
probably_wrong将近 6 年前
I had to do some digging into crowdsourcing for my PhD thesis, and these numbers are well reported in the literature.<p>Our group made the calculations to ensure that our task would pay at least minimum wage. As a result, we had to throttle our participants because they would hit our servers pretty hard.<p>That&#x27;s not to say that the experience was easy - we had to implement every possible sanity check, and even then we ended up throwing away half our data. For us it was still worth it, since twice the rate was still cheap and we knew not to trust the internet. But a less internet-savy researcher blindly trusting their data would have gotten some surprising results.
评论 #20439348 未加载
评论 #20443414 未加载
dsissitka将近 6 年前
If you&#x27;d like to see what this looks like in practice see:<p><a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.youtube.com&#x2F;watch?v=h9Qt6bVc5mY&amp;list=PLuh2SVJZ17yC2-32cCfOCw_CIRFsVdNF5&amp;index=2&amp;t=0s" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.youtube.com&#x2F;watch?v=h9Qt6bVc5mY&amp;list=PLuh2SVJZ17...</a><p>The hourly rate will flash every few seconds.
评论 #20443171 未加载
TrackerFF将近 6 年前
The problem with these gigs is that the tasks are extremely generalized. So while they attract more workers, it is always going to be a sellers market. The only way a worker can scale his income, is by increasing volume - and picking the right assignments.<p>I&#x27;ve been doing side-hustles since I was a teen, and continue today, even though I have a well-paying professional job. My observations are that domain knowledge &#x2F; specialized expertise always pays better.<p>You&#x27;re much better off learning some hobby, almost any hobby, and monetizing it. How do you monetize it? Do content writing. Start flipping on Ebay &#x2F; Craigslist &#x2F; etc. Perform &#x2F; create if you can. etc.<p>Now - I understand that these (MTurk) kinds of jobs are for desperate people, that want&#x2F;need the money now - not 4 years down the road. Building expert knowledge will take time, and you will more likely than not get burnt a few times in the start - but the long-term payoff is much better.<p>Last month, I made $800 in selling two musical instruments. Time invested in it all was around 2-3 hours, mostly on picking &#x27;em up, and shipping them.<p>Maybe not the answer for everyone, but it&#x27;s extremely hard for me to imagine any other way now. I currently have three different hobbies which I enjoy very much (and have for years), and I&#x27;m lucky enough to have so much knowledge in that I also make a decent side-income off.<p>Best of all? It doesn&#x27;t feel like you&#x27;re working - though you need to treat it like work, if you&#x27;re gonna make money.
评论 #20439135 未加载
closetOperator将近 6 年前
<p><pre><code> Unless you have a clear strategy, MTurk work is a complete waste of time. </code></pre> True. I perused Mechanical Turk tasks some months ago, and was confronted by an array of plaintive, useless demands to perform what amounts to unproductive garbage picking for listless and disinterested college grad students running unimaginative projects without a clue as to whether the requested task is even possible.<p>It would be a request like:<p><pre><code> Gather phone numbers from this queue of web pages. </code></pre> And they&#x27;d seem to have paid for a &quot;database&quot; of &quot;leads&quot; which was more than likely an excel spreadsheet of &quot;hyperlinks&quot; categorized according to a search query of keywords from the data provider.<p>You get into the queue, and start pulling up each URL in series, and they&#x27;re all these expired domains with parked registrar pages for GoDaddy and Tucows or whatever, Along with some Geocities, Angelfile, Tripod and AOL home pages thrown in. Quickly, you get a sense that some fool of data science masters program enrollee paid good money for a dusty, mouldering text file, didn&#x27;t even look at it, and dropped it right the fuck into a template for a Mechanical Turk task.<p>Now, there are three immediately obvious courses of action. One, abort and never again consider Mechanical Turk as a useful platform for operating an exchange of effort for rewards. Two, plead with the task owner by reporting feedback to them and ask them to stop for a moment and consider the flaws inherent to this framing of a human activity deemed worthy of compensation. Three, obey the letter of the law, and not the spirit, hold your nose, bellow the words &quot;you asked for it!&quot; and proceed to fill the task with the tech support numbers for all of the domain registrars, hoping that you&#x27;ll not only get paid for grifting on the task owner, but also possibly inundate all these domain squatting registrars with robocalls trawling for psyche student surveys and questionnaires that will attempt to publish similarly terrible research papers designed with the intent to ostensibly &quot;prove&quot; a flawed hypothesis of human behavior with results that couldn&#x27;t possibly be replicated because the hypothesis itself begs its own question.<p>Valuing my time, I just logged out, and haven&#x27;t looked back since.<p>They need moderators to mechanical turk the quality of each task, because it benefits no one and wastes people&#x27;s time, to even propose fruitless, unredeeming tasks.<p>Unless things have changed since winter, from what I witnessed, there is perhaps zero review of tasks to assess whether a request fits the profile of anything even remotely possible or worth trying.
s_Hogg将近 6 年前
Related to this, Stanford created something so you can use Mechanical Turk without being overly exploitative (ensures you pay at least US$15&#x2F;hr): <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;fairwork.stanford.edu&#x2F;" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;fairwork.stanford.edu&#x2F;</a>
评论 #20438618 未加载
评论 #20439844 未加载
gitgud将近 6 年前
I want to know who is paying $0.01 USD to get someone to manually transrcibe a reciept to a table.<p>It seems the Mechanical Turk ecconomy could be dwindling due to the accessiblity of AI these days.
评论 #20438475 未加载
评论 #20440181 未加载
评论 #20438531 未加载
评论 #20438473 未加载
Mediterraneo10将近 6 年前
I signed up for Mechanical Turk soon after its creation. I transcribed podcasts and made about $10&#x2F;hour, which was not bad money for a student, especially considering that these podcasts were on interesting subjects and it did not feel like hard work. After a few months I moved on to other things, and when I looked at MTurk again, I saw that it had quickly become a race to the bottom. No freelancing site can withstand those capitalist pressures for long.
PaulHoule将近 6 年前
Every time I have looked at Turk lately the HITs I&#x27;ve seen have been awful.<p>For instance there used to be a lot of HITs that involves transcribing printed receipts.<p>I wouldn&#x27;t mind doing this so much if the receipts weren&#x27;t smudged and creased or otherwise illegible, but I think these people have an OCR that can handle the easy ones and you&#x27;re left with a residuum of hard cases which sometimes can&#x27;t be transcribed at all, or for which you&#x27;ll probably make enough mistakes to get in trouble. I find that mentally fatiguing on top of the extra time.
anm89将近 6 年前
What would the argument be that some workers in the economy but not these people specifically deserve a minimum wage? I get that they are designated contractors but it seems pretty arbitrary. People would lose their minds if they found out Amazon was paying warehouse workers $2.50 an hour but couldn&#x27;t they just arbitrarily assign prices per package and call them contractors as well?
simonebrunozzi将近 6 年前
Working as a &quot;turker&quot; on Mechanical Turk, or as a Tasker on Taskrabbit, or as a Lyft&#x2F;Uber driver, all have one thing in common: the switching cost to&#x2F;from that particular job is almost zero.<p>In my view, this is why you can get paid less than what you deserve, but that option is still attractive to you.<p>In other words, if you have 34 minutes between things, one of the few paying things you can do is MTurk, even if it doesn&#x27;t pay well.
mhh__将近 6 年前
In my brief experience, bursts of actually quite a lot (My favourite being one where you got £1-£2 for &quot;Does this sentence make sense&quot; Yes&#x2F;No) surrounded by almost nothing.<p>I&#x27;ve seen some people on Reddit who are effectively gaming it well enough to actually make consistent money, but that&#x27;s clearly the exception not the rule.
Havoc将近 6 年前
Only way I can see this working is if you&#x27;re in a CoL area that is low end 3rd world.<p>Else pretty much anything else will be more profitable
评论 #20438914 未加载
sct202将近 6 年前
I tried mTurk after reading an article like this years ago, and it was the biggest waste of time ever. It was ungodly tedious for like pennies per task. I don&#x27;t know how anyone could be doing so well at getting tasks that average out to $0.47 ($45k&#x2F;95k tasks) like this guy is claiming; this is an absurd outlier.
Ajs1将近 6 年前
Surprising stats. I’ve been aware of mech Turk a long time, but did not realize average pay per task is quite that low
lordnacho将近 6 年前
Is there anything stopping people from just randomly filling in the surveys? It seems like the kind of thing where someone would have made a bot. How many people who are paying a couple of bucks for something like that are going to complain at you?
评论 #20439110 未加载
sschueller将近 6 年前
I wonder how many task on Mechanical Turk can actually be automated. By that I don&#x27;t mean building some fancy AI but tasks that can easily be automated and have just been posted on Mechanical Turk.
评论 #20439136 未加载
评论 #20439016 未加载
RocketSyntax将近 6 年前
You could totally automate commonly requested tasks and then apply your algorithm to many other tasks to print $
Yuval_Halevi将近 6 年前
MTurk is the closest there is for a modern slave.
评论 #20438999 未加载
评论 #20441418 未加载
senectus1将近 6 年前
wow, those number suck <i>hard</i>.<p>I wonder what Nationality these &quot;Turker&quot; are from...
评论 #20438462 未加载