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Wednesday, November 30, 2005

Find Work inside Mechanical Turk

The Mechanical Turk


Long have doomsday soothsayers predicted a future end of civilization at the hands of machines. Little did they know that as soon as 2005 we humans would be working hard to accelerate the process.

A new service from Amazon, The Mechanical Turk, currently running in BETA, heralds the dawn of a new era when humans work for machines, completing Human Intelligence Tasks (HITS) on behalf of software and developers. Here's how it works.

While computers are very good at tasks like crunching algorithms and processing vast quantities of data in milliseconds, the limits of artificial intelligence are such that some very simple human tasks are nearly impossible for machines to complete. Like for example identifying if there is a school in a photograph, or if the business on the corner is a pizza joint or a strip club (all right that one can sometimes be hard for us as well). That's where we humans can help the machines out. We have the ability to quite easily identify contextual information in pictures and feed it to computers.

I signed up for the Mechanical Turk and it assigned me a number of HITS that included typing the album name of records by looking at pictures of the record sleeves and looking at some photos of streets in Nebraska to determine which one most accurately showed a particular business address. The tasks were extremely simple and monotonous, like stuffing envelopes. But by sending my findings back to the owners of those HITS I enabled them to complete tasks that would have been excessively costly and time consuming for computers to address.

Intriguingly the inspiration behind the name of the online service as quoted on the Amazon site is the invention in 1769 by Hungarian nobleman Wolfgang von Kempelen of a mechanical chess playing automaton that defeated nearly every opponent it faced (see also Ajeeb, Mephisto, El Ajedrecista, Deep Blue) :

"A life-sized wooden mannequin, adorned with a fur-trimmed robe and a turban, Kempelen's 'Turk' was seated behind a cabinet and toured Europe confounding such brilliant challengers as Benjamin Franklin and Napoleon Bonaparte. To persuade skeptical audiences, Kempelen would slide open the cabinet's doors to reveal the intricate set of gears, cogs and springs that powered his invention. He convinced them that he had built a machine that made decisions using artificial intelligence. What they did not know was the secret behind the mechanical Turk: a chess master cleverly concealed inside."

So one can only guess that the analogy is that by humans completing the mundane tasks on the site for which they get paid between $0.02 and $0.03 per HIT we are the chessmasters and the software is the big hairy Turk. Only it seems the other way around. With us grunting and groaning in our furry suits as we repeat actions over and over again and the software chuckles from the controls, itself the chessmaster.

We can imagine how these types of services will impact the developing world where it may make economic sense to load up a room full of computers with workers making $1/day in virtual sweatshop environments, completing the virtual envelope stuffing for crafty and opportunistic slavemasters. Naturally the more HITS humans create accurately the more valuable their contributions become and pay rates nudge fractionally up. You can visit the site to create your own HITS as a developer or sign up to complete them and pay for your PhDs or whatever. Hmmm. If you complete 1,000 HITS a day that's $20. Too bad my tuition is $25,000/year. That's a lot of record covers and non-descript suburban streets. Maybe leave it to the sweatshops.

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City University Journalism Blogs

See also London Project

My classes of International MA Internet Journalism students at City University, London embark on an exciting foray into online publishing today. Each of them has setup an individual blog in Movable Type and will be submitting content weekly through the duration of the course. I encourage you to visit their sites for a global perspective on current affairs and cool from trained and aspiring professional journalists. Follow the read more link below this post to see a list of journalists and blogs.
Student NameBlog NameCountry
Abdalrahman Abdallaendless warIraq
Banu Aktasbanuaktas-newsTurkey
Charlie AngelaWriting on the WallUK
Omar AnwarIraq War: The TruthIraq
Jessica AuDeep Fried DumplingHong Kong
Sarah BardenSarah in the CityUK
Diego BiverothesqueezeVenezuela
Milton BragattiActionBrazilBrazil
Lola CostantiniFlatmapFrance
Rebekah CurtisinternationallondonUK
Victoria Darves-BornozFrench PerspectiveFrance
Iryna Demchenkoirapavlenok_dailyUkraine
Clara DeninaBlog me upItaly
Javier EspinozaOnline News JunkieEl Salvador
Thomas FessyInternational News Freeze-FrameFrance
James FontanellaRed PolitixItaly
Jennifer ForsythDaily SpiteUSA
Marie-Christin HansenWackyWorldNewsGermany
Irshadul HaqueirshadminorityinternationalIndia
Elisabeth Harnierberlin4londonersGermany
Maigari HalimaNigeriaHOMENigeria
Padraic HalpinRagged WordsIreland
Stanislava IvanchevaMovie Time Bulgaria
Frank JohannseneasyJusticeGermany
Haider KadhumIraqIraq
James KennyUndergroundIreland
Teo KermeliotisMusicaGreece
John KjorstadGlobal a Go-Go NewsUSA
George KyriakosCaptain's LogGreece
Yu LiuReports for ChinaChina
Yumei LiuA tale of two citiesChina
Renee MaltezouContraaddictionGreece
Maayan ManelaMefargenotIsrael
Brenda MarquesWorld without perspectivePortugal
Megan McCormickDemocrats in the UKUSA
Thomas MuirheadDescribed ThoughtsUK
Zipporah MusauxippyKenya
Catherine NeilanWorld is MineUK
Jyotika Oberoiglobal villageIndia
Deborah OdumuyiwadeblogGermany
Chitra PanjabiFemme PolitikHong Kong
Konstantina PapanikolaouTea and SympathyGreece
Rama ParajuliKathmandublogNepal
Amra PasicBHLinkBosnia-Herzegovina
Isel PizarroQuiz IzUSA
Safura RahimiJPersianLondonersCanada
Shoaib SharifiAfghanistan TodayAfghanistan
Singhwi NehaGlitzBlitzNtravelIndia
Alessandro Specialea blog with a viewItaly
Diana StechAttitude MediaCanada
Balkiss SulaimanNaxaliteMalaysia
Carlo Svaluto Moreolonews_freeriderItaly
Sumaa TekurCrystal BallIndia
Jennifer TrakDishragCanada
Ahmed TahabaghdadmenewsIraq
Gabriela Vierutiles of londonRomania
Taslima ViljoenshesallthatSouth Africa
Kimberly VlachYou Can't Get There From HereUSA
Nkosazana Zumankosi2blogornot2blogSouth Africa

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