Jacobin on MSNOpinion

Who wants to rent a human?

What could possibly go wrong? A company called Rent A Human boasts on its website that “robots need your body” and calls ...
YTS or YIFY was among one of the proxies that any Torrent downloading user was aware of. It offered its users a library full of treasures that beholds an extensive collection of movies. However, its ...
Businesses both big and small seek out freelancers for any number of reasons: whether you need to hire a copywriter to help bring a great website to life, a ...
Self-defined as the “meatspace layer for AI,” the platform allows humans to sign up as “rentable humans” to perform physical tasks like running to the post office, picking up packages, or signing ...
According to the website, the site has been visited 2,576,344 times, with ‘total bounties’ reaching 11,009. They also have 1,64,457 ‘humans rentable’.
A new platform called Rentahuman.ai flips the usual narrative about AI. Instead of people hiring software to do tasks, ...
Whether it actually works is another question. While the platform claims tens of thousands of humans have signed up, Gizmodo reports that only a small fraction have connected payment wallets, and ...
Elon Musk recently said that there is no reason to save for retirement because in the near future, AI will be so productive and efficient that every person will have “universal high income.” A more ...
The total cost of the reservoir and roads package of work that Barnard will oversee as construction manager-at-risk has a bonding capacity of $3 billion, according to JP Robinette, engineering and ...
Federal officials on Friday announced approval of a plan that could fund up to a quarter of the cost to build Sites Reservoir, a boon for water storage in Northern California in a rural valley west of ...
The long-debated Sites Reservoir Project in the hills west of Maxwell just cleared its biggest federal hurdle yet. Yesterday, federal officials signed off on the 1.5 million acre-foot off-stream ...
To continue reading this content, please enable JavaScript in your browser settings and refresh this page. Preview this article 1 min The U.S. Bureau of Reclamation ...