AI Wealth Truth (64): Why "Data Labor" Is Not Recognized as Labor
Digital feudalism: you create data every day (labor), but you are not paid. This is unpaid labor in the 21st century
I. What did you do today? Send WeChat messages, scroll TikTok, shop online, search with Baidu, write emails. What do these activities produce? Data. Massive data.
II. What is the value of this data? It is used to train AI models. It is used to deliver targeted ads. It is used to analyze market trends. Your data is one of the platform's most important assets.
III. What compensation do you get? Zero.
IV. This is the problem of data labor (Data Labor). You work unpaid every day. The fruits of your labor are taken by platforms. You think you are "using" a service, but you are providing a service. You are a free worker in the data factory.
V. Let us understand the essence of data labor:
VI. Every click is data. What you click and what you do not click tells the algorithm your preferences. This trains the algorithm to be more accurate. Your clicks are training data; you are a labeler.
VII. Every input is data. Your search queries, chat content, posts you publish. All of it is collected and analyzed. You are creating content and information for the platform.
VIII. Every behavior is data. Your browsing path, dwell time, scroll speed. These behaviors reveal your attention patterns. Your behavior is UX research data; you are a free test subject.
IX. How much value does this data create?
X. The global digital advertising market is about $600 billion a year. The AI training data market is worth tens of billions a year. Where does this value come from? From data provided by users. You are the raw material source for a multi trillion dollar industry. Your compensation is zero.
XI. Some say: you get free services in exchange.
XII. That is a problem. First, you do not know the terms of the trade. How much is your data worth? How much is the service worth? Is it a fair trade? You do not have this information. The information asymmetry is severe.
XIII. Second, you have no choice. If you do not agree to data collection, you cannot use the service. In the digital age, not using these services means being socially isolated. You are forced to agree. This is not a free transaction.
XIV. Third, the true cost of "service" is very low. The platform's marginal service cost is near zero. A user's search costs less than a cent. But a user's data value may be tens or hundreds of dollars per year. An unequal exchange.
XV. Some propose the concept of digital feudalism (Digital Feudalism).
XVI. In feudal times, peasants worked on the lord's land. Most of the harvest went to the lord. Peasants only got what they needed to survive. In the digital age, users produce data inside the platform's system. The data value goes to the platform. Users only get "free services." The structure is similar.
XVII. The difference is: feudal peasants knew they were laboring. Digital users do not know they are laboring. This is a more hidden exploitation.
XVIII. AI makes this problem worse.
XIX. Large language models need massive text to train. Where does this text come from? Scraped from the internet. Taken from user-generated content. The posts you write, your comments, your questions all become training data. You work for free, and the trained model is valued at tens of billions of dollars.
XX. AI-generated content creates more user interaction. More interaction produces more data. More data trains better AI. You are the fuel of this loop.
XXI. Is there a solution?
XXII. Solution 1: data dividend (Data Dividend). Platforms should pay users for their data. Some proposals suggest platforms share dividends with users based on data value. Let labor be paid.
XXIII. Solution 2: data unions. Users organize to negotiate with platforms. Collective bargaining power may be stronger than individual bargaining power. Use organization to fight organization.
XXIV. Solution 3: data sovereignty. Users should control their own data. They should have the right to delete, transfer, and sell their data. Return ownership to users.
XXV. Solution 4: regulation. Governments legislate to protect data rights. The EU's GDPR is a start. Use law to shift the balance of power.
XXVI. All of these solutions are hard to implement. Platforms have strong lobbying power. Users are unorganized. Policy makers do not understand deeply. Change takes time and struggle.
XXVII. What can you do?
XXVIII. Realize you are laboring. Every time you use a platform, you are working. This is not "leisure"; it is unpaid labor. Awareness is the first step toward change.
XXIX. Reduce data exposure. Do not provide unnecessary information. Set privacy settings to maximum. Use privacy tools. Reduce the free labor you provide.
XXX. You produce data every day. This data has real economic value. But you get no compensation. This is one of the biggest labor rights issues of the 21st century. In the AI era, your data is more valuable. Because AI needs data to get smarter. You are helping AI get smarter. The owners of AI get richer. You get "free" services and an information cocoon. Is this fair?
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