For two years, I have been part of a research team studying the lives of "crowdworkers" -- people who perform online jobs that range from tweaking algorithms, which improve the performance of search engines, to inputting and organising doctor's visit notes. We interviewed hundreds of people in the US and India who are doing the digital piecework required to make the Internet seem magically automated.
Crowdwork represents a small but rapidly growing microclimate in the ecosystem known as platform economies. These business activities are burgeoning through the ties that bind the Internet, smartphone apps and social networks. It's hard to believe, but we have no accurate headcount of this workforce, even though economists estimate it could make up almost 30 per cent of the US labour market by 2035. The boss here is not a midlevel manager but an "application programming interface", or API, software deployed through a cloud-based web platform.
The platform -- owned and operated by companies like Amazon, Upwork (formerly oDesk) and LeadGenius -- operates in concert with an API to generate and verify workers' accounts, handle the flow of millions of online job postings, and route payments to people once they complete their tasks and submit them for approval from an invisible "employer".
From our surveys of thousands of such workers, we know a lot of them string together 30 to 50 hours of work a week, earning a couple of cents to a few dollars per task. They rely on workers' forums to share information about how to sign up for platforms, what jobs to consider, which "task creators" to avoid, and even how to do certain jobs when the instructions leave out key details.
The platforms themselves provide little information about those posting the jobs. The workers have to scour thousands of tasks posted to the site each day and quickly decide which ones are worth doing.