Channels

Sticky Video Player with Ad Breaks Responsive Sticky Ad Banner
AD Affiliate Disclosure: contains advertisements and affiliate links. If you click on an ad or make a purchase through a link, CoachKeewee.com may earn a commission at no extra cost to you.
📺 WATCH US NOW!

Mercor pays over $1.5 million a day to humans training AI, says its CEO

Brendan Foody, the CEO of Mercor, said an IPO could be on the horizon.

  • Mercor pays out over $1.5 million a day to humans it enlists to train AI models.
  • Mercor recently secured a funding deal that valued the company at $10 billion.
  • Mercor has over 30,000 contractors, and its clients include major tech firms.

Brendan Foody, the CEO and cofounder of Mercor, said the company is paying over $1.5 million daily to contractors who are training AI.

Mercor, which recruits teams of human experts to train AI models, including for companies like OpenAI and Anthropic, recently completed a funding deal at a $10 billion valuation, the company said Monday.

“The company has been growing like crazy,” Foody said on the TBPN show following the valuation news.

Mercor is one of several startups that have been enlisted by Big Tech companies to help train their AI models using teams of human contractors.

The company said in a LinkedIn post on Monday that it currently has over 30,000 contractors. Foody told TBPN that a lot of investment is coming from the fields of software engineering, finance, law, and medicine.

In a blog post about the latest funding round, Foody described humans training AI as a “new category of work.”

“Millions of people will spend the next decade teaching machines the judgment, nuance, and taste that only humans possess,” Foody wrote in a blog post published on Monday. “Instead of doing predictable work repeatedly, they’ll teach agents how to do it once, so the agent can do it a million times.”

Foody told TBPN that an IPO for Mercor is “potentially on the horizon,” but did not specify a date.

Foody did not respond to a request for comment from Business Insider.

Training AI chatbots is tech’s new gold rush

Tech’s latest gold rush is getting humans to train AI chatbots.

Workers can earn up to $100 an hour training AI chatbots, from meme specialists coaching xAI’s chatbot Grok to understand internet culture to contractors tutoring it in everything from Japanese to finance.

Startups connecting these human trainers to AI labs are raising money at soaring valuations, and minting some of America’s youngest billionaires.

Surge AI CEO Edwin Chen, 37, is worth $18 billion, while Scale AI’s cofounders Alexandr Wang, 28, and Lucy Guo, 30, have fortunes of $3.2 billion and $1.4 billion, respectively, according to Forbes.

In a report published last month, Business Insider spoke with more than 60 data labelers worldwide. Several freelancers told Business Insider they have earned thousands of dollars a month training chatbots, although the work can be monotonous, chaotic, and disturbing.

Have a tip? Contact these reporters via email at kvlamis@businessinsider.com, cmlee@insider.com, or Signal at @kelseyv.21, @cmlee.81. Use a personal email address, a nonwork WiFi network, and a nonwork device; here’s our guide to sharing information securely.

Read the original article on Business Insider

Content Accuracy: Keewee.News provides news, lifestyle, and cultural content for informational purposes only. Some content is generated or assisted by AI and may contain inaccuracies, errors, or omissions. Readers are responsible for verifying the information. Third-Party Content: We aggregate articles, images, and videos from external sources. All rights to third-party content remain with their respective owners. Keewee.News does not claim ownership or responsibility for third-party materials. Affiliate Advertising: Some content may include affiliate links or sponsored placements. We may earn commissions from purchases made through these links, but we do not guarantee product claims. Age Restrictions: Our content is intended for viewers 21 years and older where applicable. Viewer discretion is advised. Limitation of Liability: By using Keewee.News, you agree that we are not liable for any losses, damages, or claims arising from the content, including AI-generated or third-party material. DMCA & Copyright: If you believe your copyrighted work has been used without permission, contact us at dcma@keewee.news. No Mass Arbitration: Users agree that any disputes will not involve mass or class arbitration; all claims must be individual.

Sponsored Advertisement