Aristos Queue Posted July 11, 2007 Report Share Posted July 11, 2007 Amazon.com has started a very cool site: http://www.mturk.com/mturk/welcome The basic idea is to use human intelligence to augment artificial intelligence. So a search query comes in "find the cheapest pizza joint along the path from my house to home that does carryout". There's no one database to check for this information -- google maps might find all the pizza places, but comparing prices and whether they do carryout requires visiting the pizza restaurant sites. But a human being behind the scenes could answer this question. So Amazon.com has established a brokering system so that you can post a question, for a price, and another person can answer it, and get paid for doing so. The interesting use of this is in beating CAPTCHAs -- a spammer that faces one of those "type in the word you see in this image" that is supposed to block robots can automate the posting of a question to the Amazon.com site and then posting the human's answer back to the original website, thus giving the robot the ability to get past the CAPTCHA. It costs a bit of money, but for some activities (online polls, marketing buzz, etc) there would be financial gain for doing the post, so it may be viable. Quote Link to comment
Yair Posted July 11, 2007 Report Share Posted July 11, 2007 QUOTE How do you improve artificial intelligence? Take away the artificialit And then call it Artificial Artificial Intelligence and hope that people don't notice. :laugh: Quote Link to comment
LAVA 1.0 Content Posted July 11, 2007 Report Share Posted July 11, 2007 I thought about this when I learned about Mechanical Turk some time ago. I looked at the types of HITs available today and saw mostly transcription of podcasts. There is this one guy $teve $tedman that has a blog called blogging for money. He has a collection of lame blogs that match popular Google keywords (dating, beer,hybrid car), includes lots of ads and then pays people a penny or two using mturk to leave a comment. He'll pay you a bit more if you write an article. Ugh... Quote Link to comment
eaolson Posted July 11, 2007 Report Share Posted July 11, 2007 Most of the rewards are in the 2-5 cent range, it seems. At minimum wage, 10 seconds of your time is worth about 1.5 cents. Most of these look like they would take significantly longer than that. Quote Link to comment
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