Chile device and task opportunity
Smartphone Video Capture Jobs in Chile
TrueLabel accepts Chile-based collectors for smartphone video opportunities that use recent iPhone or Android phone with stable 1080p video. Briefs are provided in Chilean Spanish; you can request an English copy of any brief during onboarding.
Overview
Smartphone video capture records approved task sequences on a recent phone in steady, landscape, 1080p-or-higher clips. No mount is needed: you brace the phone, keep the object and hands in frame, and avoid filters or effects. It is the most accessible capture type and the usual format for qualification samples. You submit raw clips and are paid only for accepted footage. In Chile, this is filmed in patios and enclosed balconies, apartment and home kitchens, small shops and counters, and home and study workspaces.
Applicants in Chile should have recent smartphone with stable handheld or tripod setup, a safe recording space, and availability for a sample capture before paid work opens. Coordination runs on Chile Standard Time (UTC-3, UTC-4 in winter); briefs and review windows are posted in your local time. Learn more about physical AI collector opportunity in Chile, collector jobs in Chile, hand-object interaction data.
Smartphone Video Capture in Chile answers
Collector opportunity details
- Task
- Smartphone Video Capture
- Location
- Chile
- Work type
- Remote phone capture, the usual qualification-sample format (independent contractor)
- Typical settings
- patios and enclosed balconies, apartment and home kitchens, small shops and counters, and home and study workspaces
- Common areas
- Chile briefs cluster around Santiago and Valparaíso, on Chile Standard Time with its seasonal shift.
- Capture spec
- Shoot landscape at 1080p/30fps as your baseline, step up to 4K when a brief needs fine small-part detail, disable filters and beautify, and brace the phone against a stable surface.
- Language
- Briefs are provided in Chilean Spanish; you can request an English copy of any brief during onboarding.
- Timezone
- Coordination runs on Chile Standard Time (UTC-3, UTC-4 in winter); briefs and review windows are posted in your local time.
- Pay
- $16-$22 per approved hour of usable footage
- Payout
- Payouts settle in USD and are sent by transfer to your Chilean bank account; you add your account details during onboarding and accepted work is paid through the twice-weekly queue.
- Review
- The TrueLabel collector QA team, usually within 2 business days of upload
- Last updated
- June 5, 2026
What this opportunity involves
What smartphone video capture involves in Chile
Smartphone video capture records approved task sequences on a recent phone in steady, landscape, 1080p-or-higher clips. No mount is needed: you brace the phone, keep the object and hands in frame, and avoid filters or effects. It is the most accessible capture type and the usual format for qualification samples. You submit raw clips and are paid only for accepted footage. In Chile, captures are filmed in settings such as patios and enclosed balconies, apartment and home kitchens, small shops and counters, and home and study workspaces.
Device setup that passes review
Shoot landscape at 1080p/30fps as your baseline, step up to 4K when a brief needs fine small-part detail, disable filters and beautify, and brace the phone against a stable surface. Wipe the lens, set the phone in landscape, and record one short test clip to confirm focus and exposure before the real take. In Chile, the usual kit is recent smartphone with stable handheld or tripod setup.
Common review failures in Chile
For this capture type, submissions most often fail because of recording in portrait instead of landscape orientation, leaving a beautify or effect filter enabled, which alters the footage, and holding the phone too far away so object detail is lost. Checking for these before you upload keeps work in the accepted queue. In Chile, the same checks apply to footage filmed in patios and enclosed balconies, apartment and home kitchens, small shops and counters, and home and study workspaces; the TrueLabel collector QA team returns accept or reshoot outcomes usually within 2 business days of upload.
Pay and related categories in Chile
Collectors who can complete this work often also fit Household task video, Desk object manipulation, and Hand-object interaction opportunities, since they share similar framing and privacy standards. Accepted Chile footage pays $16-$22 per approved hour of usable footage. Payouts settle in USD and are sent by transfer to your Chilean bank account; you add your account details during onboarding and accepted work is paid through the twice-weekly queue.
Capturing smartphone video footage in Chile
Chile collector work draws on apartment and home kitchens, patios, and small shops. Briefs come in Spanish, coordination follows Chile Standard Time with its seasonal shift, and you record approved sequences on a recent smartphone. You submit raw clips through TrueLabel, get paid only for accepted footage, and payouts settle in USD through a supported local method. For smartphone video capture, that usually means filming in patios and enclosed balconies, apartment and home kitchens, small shops and counters, and home and study workspaces, keeping the task area framed and private details out of view. Payouts settle in USD and are sent by transfer to your Chilean bank account; you add your account details during onboarding and accepted work is paid through the twice-weekly queue.
Matching opportunity types
TrueLabel uses collector profile signals such as location, device, language, capture setup, and sample quality to match applicants with eligible collector opportunities.
| Opportunity | Collector work |
|---|---|
| Household workflow | follow a chore from start to finished state in one landscape take |
| Object manipulation | frame the object and hands close enough to read each movement |
| Desk task | brace the phone above the desk so small parts stay sharp |
| Qualification sample | show a short, stable clip that proves clean 1080p framing |
Requirements and review
| Area | What to expect |
|---|---|
| Eligibility | Chile-based collectors work as independent contributors, must be 18 or older, and confirm each capture space is one they live in or have explicit permission to film. |
| Device | Shoot landscape at 1080p/30fps as your baseline, step up to 4K when a brief needs fine small-part detail, disable filters and beautify, and brace the phone against a stable surface. |
| Language | Briefs are provided in Chilean Spanish; you can request an English copy of any brief during onboarding. |
| Privacy | No faces, IDs, screens, addresses, payment cards, or private documents in frame; in Chile take extra care with bystanders and signage when filming patios and enclosed balconies. |
| Payment | Payouts settle in USD and are sent by transfer to your Chilean bank account; you add your account details during onboarding and accepted work is paid through the twice-weekly queue. |
Privacy and quality expectations
For this location-specific task work across Chile, good collector work is useful because the recording is clear, complete, and safe to review. Keep the task visible, avoid private information, submit raw files, and follow the opportunity brief before recording. If a project asks for first-person or smartphone video, assume that faces, IDs, payment cards, screens, addresses, private documents, and bystanders should stay out of frame unless the brief explicitly says otherwise.
For additional background, TrueLabel links to public references on privacy and responsible AI data practices. The opportunity brief, collector agreement, and TrueLabel review outcome remain the source of truth for what is accepted, rejected, or paid.
Related collector opportunities
The related opportunities below show how specific collector work is scoped across Chile when TrueLabel has matching work categories.
Related collector opportunities
FAQ
How should I set up for smartphone video capture?
Wipe the lens, set the phone in landscape, and record one short test clip to confirm focus and exposure before the real take.
What usually causes smartphone video footage to be rejected?
Common failure modes for this capture type are recording in portrait instead of landscape orientation, leaving a beautify or effect filter enabled, which alters the footage, and holding the phone too far away so object detail is lost. Checking for these before you upload keeps your acceptance rate high.
Are rejected smartphone video uploads paid?
For smartphone video capture, the usual cause of a sent-back clip is recording in portrait instead of landscape orientation. Payment applies only to accepted work that passes review; duplicate, unsafe, private, edited, or off-brief submissions are not eligible.
Do I need data collection experience to apply in Chile?
No. Opportunities in Chile are capture-first. Chile-based collectors work as independent contributors, must be 18 or older, and confirm each capture space is one they live in or have explicit permission to film.
What language are Chile briefs written in?
Briefs are provided in Chilean Spanish; you can request an English copy of any brief during onboarding. Coordination runs on Chile Standard Time (UTC-3, UTC-4 in winter); briefs and review windows are posted in your local time.
How and when are Chile collectors paid?
Accepted work enters the payment queue after review; rejected or duplicate submissions are not paid. Payouts settle in USD and are sent by transfer to your Chilean bank account; you add your account details during onboarding and accepted work is paid through the twice-weekly queue.
Apply for smartphone video work in Chile
Join the TrueLabel collector network to be considered for smartphone video and related physical AI capture opportunities in Chile.