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Collector role

Hand-Object Interaction Video Collector Jobs

TrueLabel accepts collectors for hand-object interaction collector opportunities where eligible applicants record approved task footage for physical AI and robotics teams.

Collector roleMexico, the United States, and LatAmCollector networkUpdated June 5, 2026

Overview

Hand-object interaction collection focuses tightly on manipulation: the grasp, the move, and the release. The object must stay in frame through the whole contact cycle, and the moment of grasp must be visible, not occluded by your hand or the camera angle. You shoot close, often from above, and submit raw clips. Only accepted footage is paid.

Collectors should be ready to share location, device model, mounts, language, recording space, and availability. Shoot close at 1080p/30fps minimum, often from an overhead or angled mount, so the contact point stays sharp and unoccluded through the full cycle. TrueLabel uses those details to match applicants to role-specific and location-specific collector opportunities. Learn more about hand-object interaction collector in Mexico, physical AI data marketplace, privacy and consent for video capture.

Hand-Object Interaction Video Collector job answers

Collector opportunity details

Role
Hand-Object Interaction Video Collector
Work type
Remote, opportunity-based close manipulation capture (independent contractor)
Common regions
Mexico, the United States, and LatAm
Typical equipment
recent smartphone, tripod, overhead mount, or approved wearable camera
Capture spec
Shoot close at 1080p/30fps minimum, often from an overhead or angled mount, so the contact point stays sharp and unoccluded through the full cycle.
Pay
$18-$24 per approved hour of usable footage
Payment basis
$18-$24 per approved hour of usable footage, paid only for footage the TrueLabel collector QA team accepts on review (usually within 2 business days of upload)
Review
The TrueLabel collector QA team, usually within 2 business days of upload
Last updated
June 5, 2026

What this opportunity involves

What a hand-object interaction collector records

Hand-object interaction collection focuses tightly on manipulation: the grasp, the move, and the release. The object must stay in frame through the whole contact cycle, and the moment of grasp must be visible, not occluded by your hand or the camera angle. You shoot close, often from above, and submit raw clips. Only accepted footage is paid.

Core responsibilities for hand-object interaction collectors

This role is defined by a specific set of capture habits: keep both hands and the manipulated object inside frame for the full grasp-move-release cycle, position the camera so the moment of contact and grasp is never occluded, show the object's start position and its settled end position clearly, and capture clean, repeatable manipulations rather than rushed or partial motions. Each is checked during review, so practising them before you submit keeps your acceptance rate high.

What gets accepted versus reshot

Footage is accepted when the grasp, move, and release are all visible without occlusion, the object stays in frame from first contact through final placement, and start and completed states of the manipulation are both clear. It is sent back or rejected when the grasp moment is hidden by the hand, body, or frame edge, the object leaves frame during the move or settles off-screen, and motion blur obscures the contact point between hand and object.

How TrueLabel matches hand-object interaction collectors

For a hand-object interaction collector, the setup that matters most is concrete: shoot close at 1080p/30fps minimum, often from an overhead or angled mount, so the contact point stays sharp and unoccluded through the full cycle. A passing sample proves you can keep the object in frame through grasp, move, and release with the contact moment fully visible. Your profile should also list location, language, available mounts, recording environment, and weekly availability so TrueLabel can match you to eligible work.

What makes a submission review-ready

The single most common rejection is an occluded grasp where the hand or angle hides the moment of contact. Beyond that single failure, a review-ready hand-object interaction collector clip keeps the task visible from start to finish, follows the brief, avoids private information, and arrives as a raw upload. Test your framing on a short clip before recording the real take.

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.

OpportunityCollector work
Capture responsibilityKeep both hands and the manipulated object inside frame for the full grasp-move-release cycle
Capture responsibilityPosition the camera so the moment of contact and grasp is never occluded
Capture responsibilityShow the object's start position and its settled end position clearly
Capture responsibilityCapture clean, repeatable manipulations rather than rushed or partial motions

Requirements and review

AreaWhat to expect
DeviceShoot close at 1080p/30fps minimum, often from an overhead or angled mount, so the contact point stays sharp and unoccluded through the full cycle.
Accepted whenthe grasp, move, and release are all visible without occlusion, the object stays in frame from first contact through final placement, and start and completed states of the manipulation are both clear.
Rejected whenthe grasp moment is hidden by the hand, body, or frame edge, the object leaves frame during the move or settles off-screen, and motion blur obscures the contact point between hand and object.
SubmissionRaw hand-object interaction collector files uploaded through the approved TrueLabel collector flow; the TrueLabel collector QA team reviews each one usually within 2 business days of upload and only accepted footage is paid ($18-$24 per approved hour of usable footage).

Privacy and quality expectations

For this collector role across Mexico, the United States, and LatAm, 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 Mexico, the United States, and LatAm when TrueLabel has matching work categories.

FAQ

What makes a hand-object interaction collector submission pass review?

A passing sample proves you can keep the object in frame through grasp, move, and release with the contact moment fully visible.

What is the most common reason hand-object interaction collector footage is rejected?

The single most common rejection is an occluded grasp where the hand or angle hides the moment of contact. Most reshoots for this role come back to that single issue, so check it on a short test clip before recording the full task.

Are rejected hand-object interaction collector uploads paid?

For this role, footage is sent back when the grasp moment is hidden by the hand, body, or frame edge. Payment applies only to accepted work that passes review; duplicate, unsafe, private, edited, or off-brief submissions are not eligible.

Apply for hand-object interaction collector opportunities

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