{"id":1039,"date":"2026-07-18T20:08:04","date_gmt":"2026-07-18T20:08:04","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/smartmovinghome.com\/?p=1039"},"modified":"2026-07-18T20:08:04","modified_gmt":"2026-07-18T20:08:04","slug":"indian-workers-are-resisting-efforts-to-train-their-ai-robot-replacements","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/smartmovinghome.com\/?p=1039","title":{"rendered":"Indian Workers Are Resisting Efforts to Train Their AI Robot Replacements"},"content":{"rendered":"<div>\n<!-- begin partial\/series-card --><\/p>\n<div>\n<div>\n<p><i><span>Support justice-driven, accurate and transparent news \u2014 make a <\/span><\/i><i><span>quick donation<\/span><\/i><i><span> to Truthout today!\u00a0<\/span><\/i><\/p>\n<p>Read more <a href=\"https:\/\/smartmovinghome.com\/?p=1037\">Trump Administration Guts Endangered Species Act to Prioritize Corporate Interests<\/a><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<p>HR staff claimed the tiny cameras affixed to each tailor\u2019s head would mean prospective clients saw the quality of their products and placed more orders, resulting in pay rises for everyone at the garment factory on the outskirts of India\u2019s capital. <\/p>\n<p>But the workers suspected the real reason was AI.<\/p>\n<p>So Ankush Yadav, a young tailor, and his friends pried open the cameras, pulled out the memory cards and plugged them into their phones. <\/p>\n<p>\u201cWe viewed the footage on our mobiles and found it was recording our voices, everything we said, our hands, our work, everything, in three-minute clips,\u201d Yadav said. \u201cAfter every three minutes, it would record afresh.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>As policymakers and ordinary people struggle to make sense of how large-language models such as ChatGPT, Claude and Gemini will disrupt millions of office jobs, AI companies are racing to solve one of technology\u2019s knottiest problems: dexterity, or training AI models to touch, feel, and manipulate objects in the real world. Robots are already good at regulated non-contact tasks, such as welding and spray-painting, but struggle with unstructured tasks such as stitching, sewing, or blindly groping in a handbag for a phone.<\/p>\n<p>In theory, artificial general intelligence coupled with human-like dexterity would result in the human-replacing \u201crobot army\u201d that tech moguls such as Elon Musk, the world\u2019s richest man, have long dreamed of. But first, the robots need to learn to change a lightbulb.<\/p>\n<p>One increasingly popular approach is training models on millions of hours of recordings of humans performing dexterous tasks, in the hope of achieving a dexterity breakthrough akin to how language models like ChatGPT acquired the ability to mimic language and cognition after ingesting the vast corpus of data available on the internet. One estimate projects that over the next three years, robotics labs may spend over $1.5bn to acquire between 100 million and one billion hours of footage of people performing perhaps the most human of actions: the skilled use of their hands.<\/p>\n<p>A handful of AI startups such as OpenAI and Anthropic have achieved multi-billion-dollar valuations by stealing the intellectual property of writers, artists, musicians and everyday internet users without their consent. Now, a new cohort of companies is looking to repeat their success with manual workers. These firms are striking deals with factory owners in India, offering the use of their cameras to surveil employees like Yadav, who already labour under exploitative conditions, in exchange for the footage.<\/p>\n<p>But savvy Indian factory workers told <em>openDemocracy<\/em> how they have thus far resisted such attempts, offering a template for workers elsewhere to disrupt the relentless onslaught of surveillance capitalism.<\/p>\n<p>\u201cBefore deploying cameras and sensors and harvesting the physical movements of people on the other side of the world, we must ask ourselves the question: What would it look like if we designed our technology for everyone involved?\u201d said Caitrin Lynch, professor of anthropology at Olin College of Engineering, Massachusetts. \u201cWhat would it look like to partner with the workers to find out what tech they would welcome, and work from there?\u201d<\/p>\n<p>Lynch, who researches the intersection of robotics and society, said that rather than extracting data from workers, this could be an opportunity to design AI applications and robotics technology to benefit both workers and companies. <\/p>\n<p>\u201cAs technologists, we cannot simply wait for policy to catch up to our technological capabilities,\u201d she said. \u201cWe have a responsibility to look at the history of colonial extraction and recognise when we are repeating its patterns.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>Technologists at the cutting edge of robotics research told <em>openDemocracy<\/em> their field faces \u201ca massive data problem\u201d. In short, the large and diverse datasets that robots require to learn are hard to come by.<\/p>\n<p>The current gold standard approaches to training involve a human remotely controlling a robot to perform physical tasks such as lifting or sorting, or a human performing a manual task while wearing a glove-like \u201cgripper\u201d that mimics a robot hand. These are effective, but hard to scale and very expensive. <\/p>\n<p>A cheaper approach is to use simulation data, in which an AI model designed to train robots is run and tested in a controlled virtual environment \u2014 but this has its own drawbacks.<\/p>\n<p>\u201cYou can easily scale in simulation, but nothing is as good as real data,\u201d said Jigar Kumar Patel, a roboticist machine learning engineer at the Robotics and AI Institute in Cambridge, Massachusetts. \u201cPhysical properties do not easily translate into models. Simulators are getting better but we are not there yet,\u201d he explained, describing a \u201csimulation gap\u201d in which the properties of objects in the real world \u2014 weights, noises, malleability to touch, unpredictability \u2014 do not translate accurately into data.<\/p>\n<p>In this context, technologists are turning to \u201cegocentric data\u201d, or footage obtained from head-mounted cameras, which accurately capture the positions and configurations of human hands as they perform complex tasks. Predictably, a number of startups have sprung up to service this need.<\/p>\n<p>One startup making the headgear required for this data is Egolab.AI, which was founded in January this year by two Indian teens living abroad, one of whom had dropped out of an engineering programme at a US university. <\/p>\n<p><em>openDemocracy<\/em> spoke to 20 workers from two factories in Delhi\u2019s industrial belt who were asked to wear Egolab\u2019s head-mounted cameras earlier this year, but were not told why they would be doing so. Yadav works at the smaller of the two factories, owned by Pearl Apparel, which employs around 500-600 workers at two units outside the Indian capital. The second factory is owned by Pearl Global Industries, a multinational with a workforce of more than 30,000 people across India, Bangladesh, Vietnam, Indonesia and Guatemala, which supplies brands such as Zara, Ralph Lauren, Gap and Primark. The two factories are not connected, despite their similar names.<\/p>\n<p>Around the same time that the factory employees we spoke to were trialling its headgear, Egolab was snapped up by another startup headed by two similarly youthful founders. Build Artificial Intelligence Inc. describes itself as the \u201clargest egocentric data collection effort in history\u201d, with an aim to \u201cbuild AI on a human foundation\u201d. It was registered last year in the US state of Delaware by Edward Xu, 19, and Jonathan Jia, 21.<\/p>\n<p>Egolab offered prospective factories a deal that perfectly encapsulates the oppressive dynamics of technology in the modern workplace. <\/p>\n<p>In a pitch deck obtained by Indian news site Scroll.in and shared with <em>openDemocracy<\/em>, Egolab invited Indian manufacturing firms to \u201clead global AI data revolution\u201d by helping it collect authentic footage of workflows of \u201cassembling, machining, loading\u201d. In return, it offered the companies free access to so-called \u201cAI-powered efficiency reports\u201d derived from surveilling workers through the same cameras, which would monitor how they used their time on the shop floor, whether they were idle, or even whether they congregated for a few seconds. The startup called this snooping \u201cproductivity analytics\u201d based on its proprietary models. <\/p>\n<p>Read more <a href=\"https:\/\/smartmovinghome.com\/?p=1035\">Colorado ICE Jail Employee Accused of Shooting a Protester Is Arrested<\/a><\/p>\n<p>A sample report produced by the company included \u201ccritical insights\u201d such as \u201c51% of idle time is socialising. This is 3x higher than top factories. We noticed workers from different stations gathering near the wearer of CAM 02 between 2:00-3:30 PM\u201d and \u201cProductivity drops by 35% after lunch for all workers. Top factories solve this by starting high-priority tasks right after lunch instead of allowing workers to \u201cease back in\u201d.<\/p>\n<p>Egolab\u2019s pitch deck said \u201cworkers opt in voluntarily\u201d to wearing the cameras and that they \u201ccan withdraw anytime\u201d \u2014 claims that contradicted the experiences of workers interviewed by <em>openDemocracy.<\/em><\/p>\n<p>\u201cBy taking data of employees who are a captive workforce and already have little bargaining power, such companies are collecting data in a regulatory vacuum,\u201d said Shruti Narayan, a New Delhi-based technology lawyer. <\/p>\n<p>India still does not have robust data protection legislation. Its primary data privacy law, the Digital Personal Data Protection Act, suffered years of delay and deferral before being passed hastily in one week in 2023, amid a walkout by Parliament\u2019s opposition members. The bulk of its privacy provisions \u2014 particularly on consent \u2014 were deferred and will not come into effect until mid-2027.<\/p>\n<p>Egolab.AI and Build AI did not respond to requests for comment. <\/p>\n<p>At both Pearl Global and Pearl Apparel, workers were required to wear the headgear for two weeks in late March and early April. On one hand, the cameras were just one more instance of exploitation in a country where less than 20% of factory employees hold a written contract. On the other, there was something clearly uncanny about the trials, which stopped as mysteriously as they started.<\/p>\n<p>Yadav said workers at Pearl Apparel were initially bemused by the strange new intrusion on the factory shop floor.<\/p>\n<p>\u201cThey were asking us to wear [the headset] all eight hours, seeing how long we work, how long, say, we use mobiles; they were recording everything,\u201d he said, adding: \u201cThey could listen to everything we said.\u201d In company documents, Egolab.AI claims it blurs faces and mutes voices in the data it makes further available, but that was not the workers\u2019 experience.<\/p>\n<p>\u201cA team would arrive around 9 am and ask tailors, helpers \u2014 who cut threads, pack garments, emboss stickers \u2014 to wear the camera on their heads,\u201d said one of Yadav\u2019s colleagues, Arun Ram, an experienced master tailor who stitches the prototype for other tailors to replicate. \u201cThen, at 5:30 pm, when the general shift was over, they took the devices away.\u201d <\/p>\n<p>At both factories, the workers\u2019 compensation for sharing skills perfected over years of labour, through which they earn their livelihoods, with a company that hopes to train robots to be able to do their jobs, was a warm tetrapak of Mango Frooti, an artificially fruit-flavoured drink.<\/p>\n<p>When their pleas to take the cameras off fell on deaf ears, workers quietly stopped wearing them or repeatedly took them on and off to render the footage useless and hinder the \u2018productivity analysis\u2019.<\/p>\n<p>\u201cWearing it would hurt my head and I would take it off,\u201d recounted Veena Devi*, who worked on the same floor as Ram. Devi migrated to the industrial pockets surrounding Delhi from her village in Uttar Pradesh ten years ago. \u201cI would try to remove it, but my supervisor would ask again and again to wear it, so I had to put the camera back on my head.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>Devi said she and her colleagues enquired about the purpose of data collection several times, but neither their supervisors nor the team of young people who arrived every morning to distribute the headsets responded to them. \u201cWe would ask, \u2018Why are you making us wear this?\u2019 but the supervisors would not say.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>Sonu Kumar, a young tailor at Pearl Global, said his supervisor told him the data collection was for \u201ctraining\u201d \u2014 but not who the training was for. On hearing that the footage may be used for automation and training AI, Kumar added: \u201cIf I knew it was for training a robot, I would prefer not to wear it. If they want a robot to do this work, then why don\u2019t they get one to do stitch clothes already?\u201d<\/p>\n<p>Mid-level managers and HR staff at both factories seemed equally in the dark. At Pearl Apparel, a HR manager said that because the senior management had not shared the cameras\u2019 purpose with them, they told the workers that it was for \u201ctraining other workers in the future\u201d. At Pearl Global, HR staff said their role was limited to providing a room for the startup team operating the camera devices, where they could gather, monitor and charge devices daily. \u201cA team of six to ten young girls and boys would arrive and divide themselves to place the cameras on the five floors above in the different departments: production, finishing, packing.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>A mid-level manager at Pearl Apparel who spoke to <em>openDemocracy<\/em> on the condition of anonymity said they found it hard to \u201cmotivate\u201d staff to wear the cameras because they, too, didn\u2019t know what they were being used for. \u201cTheir camera teams would say this was being done for \u2018Output and time calculation\u2019. Workers would come and tell us, \u2018No, sir, it\u2019s for AI,\u2019\u201d said the manager. \u201cIf the workers had taken the devices off to go to the toilet, most of them would not wear them again. The senior management would call and tell us: \u2018Why aren\u2019t you making them wear it through the shift? This way, no productivity analysis can happen\u2019. But not even one worker wore it all eight hours.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>Kumar, like most tailors in the industrial belt, worked eight-hour shifts daily and did an hour or two of overtime a week, for which he received a monthly salary of 15,108 rupees, around \u00a3115, for most of the past two years. This rose to 18,500 rupees (\u00a3142) in April, after Delhi\u2019s industrial region was hit by a wave of strikes as long-simmering grievances over stagnant wages and harsh work conditions came to a head when cooking gas prices soared in the wake of the US-Iran war. Picketing workers clashed with the police until the state government announced a 35% rise in the minimum wage.  <\/p>\n<p>During the unrest, workers at Pearl Global stopped work twice, staff at the factory\u2019s unit told <em>openDemocracy.<\/em> The first time, workers on the shop floor downed tools for over an hour. \u201cThe next morning, more than a thousand of them gathered outside the gate and refused to go inside the factory for the general shift,\u201d one worker said. <\/p>\n<p>Staff resumed work only after the company representatives agreed to increase their wages in line with the new minimum wage. Several workers complained that the camera headsets were generating heat and causing them headaches, said a supervisor. The data collection continued for a day or two after their return to work, but workers were increasingly failing to cooperate with wearing the headsets for much of the day. Two weeks into the experiment, the video-collection experiment was quietly shelved at both factories.<\/p>\n<p>Neither Pearl Apparel nor Pearl Global responded to <em>openDemocracy<\/em>\u2019s request for comment.<\/p>\n<p><em>openDemocracy<\/em> asked Chintu Pal, a garment worker in his mid-30s who works at Pearl Global, what would happen if, in the near future, robots did learn to sew in place of workers. \u201cI think they are not able to make such machines right now,\u201d he said. \u201cOr else, they would feel no need for a <em>kaarigar <\/em>(a skilled craftsman). The first thing they would do would be to chase the poor away. \u2018<em>Bhag jao<\/em>!\u2019 (Be off!), they would like to tell us\u201d.<\/p>\n<p>He thought for a few seconds before adding: \u201cI believe this might already be happening in China.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>Read more <a href=\"https:\/\/smartmovinghome.com\/?p=1033\">Health Insurers Walk Back on Pledge to Improve Denials Process<\/a><\/p>\n<p><em>*Worker names have been changed to protect their privacy<\/em>.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>The resistance offers lessons for workers elsewhere to disrupt the relentless onslaught of surveillance capitalism.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":1038,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[1],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-1039","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","has-post-thumbnail","hentry","category-interesting"],"yoast_head":"<!-- This site is optimized with the Yoast SEO plugin v27.6 - 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