Head-mounted camera opportunity
Head-Mounted Camera Capture Jobs
Head-Mounted Camera Capture jobs are collector opportunities where eligible applicants record approved footage using approved head mount with stable point-of-view framing.
Overview
Head-mounted camera capture holds a first-person eye-line that moves with your gaze, so the camera naturally looks where you look. It suits assembly and detailed handling where the point of view should track the hands closely. You fit the head mount at a steady eye-line, avoid sudden head jerks, and submit raw captures. Only accepted footage is paid.
Fit an approved head mount at a natural eye-line, shoot 1080p/60fps so quick head turns stay sharp rather than blurred, and keep your head motion smooth between steps. Accepted head-mounted camera footage pays $18-$24 per approved hour of usable footage, reviewed by the TrueLabel collector QA team usually within 2 business days of upload. Describe your device, mounts, recording space, language, and availability so TrueLabel can match you to head-mounted camera and related opportunities in the United States, Canada, and Mexico. Learn more about head-mounted camera work in Mexico, hand-object interaction data, privacy and consent for video capture.
Head-Mounted Camera Capture job answers
Collector opportunity details
- Task
- Head-Mounted Camera Capture
- Work type
- Remote first-person eye-line capture (independent contractor)
- Common regions
- the United States, Canada, and Mexico
- Typical equipment
- approved head mount with stable point-of-view framing
- Capture spec
- Fit an approved head mount at a natural eye-line, shoot 1080p/60fps so quick head turns stay sharp rather than blurred, and keep your head motion smooth between steps.
- 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 head-mounted camera capture involves
Head-mounted camera capture holds a first-person eye-line that moves with your gaze, so the camera naturally looks where you look. It suits assembly and detailed handling where the point of view should track the hands closely. You fit the head mount at a steady eye-line, avoid sudden head jerks, and submit raw captures. Only accepted footage is paid.
Device setup that passes review
Fit an approved head mount at a natural eye-line, shoot 1080p/60fps so quick head turns stay sharp rather than blurred, and keep your head motion smooth between steps. Adjust the head mount until your hands sit comfortably mid-frame when you look down at a work surface, then lock it.
Common review failures
For this capture type, submissions most often fail because of quick head turns that smear the footage with motion blur, an eye-line set too high or low so the hands sit at the frame edge, and the mount loosening and dropping the gaze off the task. Checking for these before you upload keeps work in the accepted queue.
Related collector categories
Collectors who can complete this work often also fit Wearable camera, Chest-mounted video, and Hand-object interaction opportunities, since they share similar framing and privacy standards.
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 |
|---|---|
| First-person chore | let the eye-line follow the task as you move through it |
| Assembly task | keep the parts and hands centered in the head-mounted view |
| Object handling | look directly at the object so it stays sharp and centered |
| Tool-adjacent action | track the tool and surface together within the eye-line |
Requirements and review
| Area | What to expect |
|---|---|
| Device | Fit an approved head mount at a natural eye-line, shoot 1080p/60fps so quick head turns stay sharp rather than blurred, and keep your head motion smooth between steps. |
| Setup | Adjust the head mount until your hands sit comfortably mid-frame when you look down at a work surface, then lock it. |
| Avoid | quick head turns that smear the footage with motion blur, an eye-line set too high or low so the hands sit at the frame edge, and the mount loosening and dropping the gaze off the task. |
| Submission | Raw files uploaded through the approved TrueLabel collector flow; only accepted work is paid. |
Privacy and quality expectations
For this device-based work across the United States, Canada, and Mexico, 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 the United States, Canada, and Mexico when TrueLabel has matching work categories.
Related collector opportunities
FAQ
How should I set up for head-mounted camera capture?
Adjust the head mount until your hands sit comfortably mid-frame when you look down at a work surface, then lock it.
What usually causes head-mounted camera footage to be rejected?
Common failure modes for this capture type are quick head turns that smear the footage with motion blur, an eye-line set too high or low so the hands sit at the frame edge, and the mount loosening and dropping the gaze off the task. Checking for these before you upload keeps your acceptance rate high.
Are rejected head-mounted camera uploads paid?
For head-mounted camera capture, the usual cause of a sent-back clip is quick head turns that smear the footage with motion blur. Payment applies only to accepted work that passes review; duplicate, unsafe, private, edited, or off-brief submissions are not eligible.
Apply for head-mounted camera opportunities
Join the TrueLabel collector network to be considered for head-mounted camera, first-person video, wearable camera, and physical AI capture opportunities.