Video Caption Specialist | $25/hr Remote
Overview
This role involves reviewing short (5-second) videos of robots performing physical tasks and analyzing corresponding AI-generated captions. The specialist detects discrepancies, hallucinations, or omissions, then rewrites captions for accuracy and clarity to help train next-generation AI systems. It requires strong editing skills and attention to detail, but no prior AI experience is necessary.
What You'll Do6
- 1Review short 5-second videos of robots performing physical tasks while analyzing AI-generated captions
- 2Detect visual-text discrepancies, identifying hallucinations or omissions in captions
- 3Rewrite captions with clear, concise, and grammatically correct language emphasizing robot movement precision
- 4Maintain strict consistency with established project guidelines and rubrics
- 5Meet or exceed daily throughput and quality benchmarks
- 6Collaborate with the customer’s team to provide feedback and share best practices
Requirements6
- 1Fluency in English with excellent grammar, spelling, and written clarity
- 2Keen attention to detail and ability to spot subtle errors or inaccuracies
- 3Comfortable analyzing and comparing short video clips and written descriptions repeatedly
- 4Strong judgment for rewriting and editing text for maximum accuracy and clarity
- 5Ability to adhere to detailed instructions and maintain consistency across repetitive review work
- 6Reliable internet connection and a computer capable of smooth video streaming
Who Should Apply
Ideal candidates have strong writing, editing, or journalism backgrounds—such as copy editors, technical writers, or transcriptionists—and enjoy meticulous detail-oriented work. Experience in AI training data annotation, RLHF, or video annotation is a plus, but not required. This role suits someone comfortable with repetitive visual analysis and dedicated to producing precise, high-quality captions.
Salary Insight
The job pays $25 per hour as a contractor position.
Required Skills
Application Tip
Highlight specific examples of your editing or proofreading work (e.g., before/after samples) and emphasize your ability to spot subtle errors—especially in motion or action descriptions.