Robots and AI learn everyday work by watching people do it. Record yours at home on your
phone — dishes, laundry, tidying — and earn $20/hr for the clips we accept.
Paid every week, on time. A rate we publish up front. We never ghost you.
Joining is free. You decide what your footage trains, and you can pull it back later.
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your consent
the math, published
can you do this? what could you make?
what this is
Recording ordinary tasks at home on your phone.
$20/hr for clips we accept, paid weekly on a schedule we publish.
Yours to fit around life — record as little or as much as you want.
Real consent: you choose what your footage trains, and you can take it back.
what it isn't
A survey or points app that pays you pennies.
Pay-to-join. Anyone asking you for money is a scam.
Gig-app roulette where the rate quietly drops or you get ghosted.
Complicated. If you can film a clip, you qualify.
start to paid
what a session actually looks like.
01
Open the app and pick a task — say, cleaning the kitchen or folding laundry.
02
Prop your phone or wear an action cam so your hands stay in frame, then record it the way you normally would. About 10 to 20 minutes.
03
Upload it. We check the framing and accept the clip — or tell you exactly what to fix.
04
Paid weekly at $20/hr for accepted time. Bring a friend and earn a bit more.
A worked example: record about an hour of accepted tasks across the week and that's
$20 in your account that week. Do more when you want more. The rate is the
rate, posted before you start.
the bar, up front
what gets accepted.
Clips get paid when we can use them. The bar is simple, and we tell you before you start.
The people who train AI are usually the worst-treated part of the whole pipeline — paid
late, paid less than promised, ghosted when they ask a question. That's backwards: the data
is only ever as good as the people who make it. So we made the boring promises and we
intend to keep them — post the rate, pay on time, answer when you write. If that sounds
like a low bar, it is. Almost nobody clears it.
— Tyler Mose, CEO, matchpoint
the honest part
the part most apps won't say out loud.
Most gig work burns people: the rate quietly drops, money shows up late or not at all, and
support never writes back. We built matchpoint to do the opposite, and we put it in
writing — a rate we publish, weekly payment on a schedule we publish, consent you control,
and a person who answers. If we ever break that, hold us to it.
Know someone who'd be good at this? Refer a friend and earn a bonus
when they qualify.
straight answers.
No. We never charge you to join, and anyone asking you for money is not us. The rate is published, payment is weekly on a posted schedule, and a real person answers when you write in.
Weekly, on a schedule we publish, for the footage we accept that week. You connect a payout account once during sign-up — no points, no store credit, no waiting on a vague 'review.'
$20 for every hour of accepted footage. Record an hour across the week and that's $20 that week. The program caps at 50 accepted hours ($1,000) per person.
No. If you can film a short clip on your phone with your hands in frame, you qualify. We tell you exactly what 'accepted' looks like before you start.
A recent phone (iPhone 12+, Pixel 6+, Samsung S21+) or an action camera like a GoPro. We check during the 2-minute application.
Everyday tasks you already do — cooking, cleaning, tidying, small repairs. You pick from the available tasks; nothing staged, nothing you're not comfortable with.
You consent to exactly how it's used and you can revoke it later. Every clip is traceable end to end, and we never sell your identity.
We run programs across the United States, Latin America, and Southeast Asia, and we're expanding. Tell us where you are and we'll point you to the nearest open program.