A worker on Tesla's Autopilot team described what it's like labeling the influx of driver videos.
Some quotes from the article:
There is something very strange about having this very intimate view into someone's life. It feels odd to see someone's daily drive, but it's also an important part of correcting and refining the program.
We review about five and a half to six hours of footage per day. It can be very hard to focus. You can get in this kind of fog when you're just watching clip after clip and it can be difficult to keep yourself sane.
Anytime you're not clicking around in the software program, it tracks you as if you aren't working and it basically sets off an alarm to your superiors.
These jobs sound very dystopian to me, and a bit psychopathic as well. All the movies I watched growing up about dystopian societies is reflected in what this guy says about his job.
I'm Norway, and yeah, I'm sure there are places that don't abide by the law. But, I'm quite certain the kind of monitoring Tesla appears to be doing would be national news in a hurry, and something that would be cracked down on.
I don't know where you live to think that, and all the people who upvote you??? For sure these work conditions would not be neither legal nor accepted in Scandinavian countries, and I'm pretty sure they aren't legal in EU.
Both the surveillance and bathroom conditions would be reason for blockades of the company.
AFAIK Tesla is still under boycott by the Swedish unions, and that was supported by unions in Denmark too.
It's very expensive for companies to behave like that in Scandinavian countries, and doubtless also other EU countries.