LatAm collector role
First-Person Video Data Collector Jobs in LatAm
TrueLabel accepts LatAm-based first-person video collector applicants for evergreen physical AI data collection opportunities. Briefs are available in Spanish or Portuguese, with English on request, matched to your country.
Overview
First-person video collection captures a task-led point of view: the framing follows your hands and the object you are working with, and the camera can be phone-held or lightly mounted as long as the action stays centered. You record short, approved task sequences, keep hands and surfaces in frame, and submit raw clips. Payment applies only to footage accepted after review. In LatAm, this work is filmed in home kitchens and dining areas, neighborhood markets and small shops, shared building or apartment spaces, and informal workshops and repair benches.
Applicants in LatAm should be ready to share device details, mount options, language, safe recording space, and availability before completing a short qualification sample. Coordination spans several Latin American zones; each brief lists its review window in your local time so cross-border collectors stay aligned. Learn more about First-Person Video Data Collector opportunity in LatAm, collector jobs in LatAm, privacy and consent for video capture.
First-Person Video Data Collector in LatAm answers
Collector opportunity details
- Role
- First-Person Video Data Collector
- Location
- LatAm
- Work type
- Remote, opportunity-based point-of-view capture (independent contractor)
- Typical settings
- home kitchens and dining areas, neighborhood markets and small shops, shared building or apartment spaces, and informal workshops and repair benches
- Common areas
- Briefs draw on anchor metros across the region, from CDMX and Bogotá to São Paulo, Santiago, Buenos Aires, and Lima.
- Capture spec
- Shoot at 1080p/30fps minimum, hold the phone or mount close enough that the hands fill a useful portion of the frame, and keep the action centered as you move.
- Language
- Briefs are available in Spanish or Portuguese, with English on request, matched to your country.
- Timezone
- Coordination spans several Latin American zones; each brief lists its review window in your local time so cross-border collectors stay aligned.
- Pay
- $18-$24 per approved hour of usable footage
- Payout
- Payouts settle in USD through the rail for your country: SPEI in Mexico, Pix in Brazil, Nequi or local bank transfer in Colombia, and local bank transfer in Chile, Argentina, and Peru. You confirm your method 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 a first-person video collector records in LatAm
In LatAm, a first-person video collector films point-of-view task footage where hands, objects, surfaces, and task motion stay visible in settings such as home kitchens and dining areas, neighborhood markets and small shops, shared building or apartment spaces, and informal workshops and repair benches. Briefs draw on anchor metros across the region, from CDMX and Bogotá to São Paulo, Santiago, Buenos Aires, and Lima. Strong submissions show setup, task motion, object state changes, and completion clearly enough for the TrueLabel collector QA team to review.
Core responsibilities for first-person video collectors in LatAm
This role is defined by a specific set of capture habits: frame each clip so your hands, the object, and the work surface stay visible for the whole task, lead the shot with the action rather than holding a fixed, scenic camera angle, capture the task from start to finished state in one continuous take where the brief asks for it, and keep lighting even so contact points and object detail read clearly on review. Each is checked during review, so practising them before you submit keeps your acceptance rate high. In LatAm, you apply these habits in home kitchens and dining areas, neighborhood markets and small shops, shared building or apartment spaces, and informal workshops and repair benches.
What gets accepted versus reshot in LatAm
Footage is accepted when hands and the manipulated object stay in frame across the full task, the completed or finished state is clearly visible at the end of the clip, and motion is steady enough that contact points are readable. It is sent back or rejected when the action drifts out of frame or the object leaves the shot mid-task, heavy shake or motion blur hides the hands or the object detail, and bystander faces or identifying personal information appear without being blurred or excluded. Accepted LatAm work pays $18-$24 per approved hour of usable footage, reviewed by the TrueLabel collector QA team usually within 2 business days of upload. Payouts settle in USD through the rail for your country: SPEI in Mexico, Pix in Brazil, Nequi or local bank transfer in Colombia, and local bank transfer in Chile, Argentina, and Peru. You confirm your method during onboarding and accepted work is paid through the twice-weekly queue.
How TrueLabel matches first-person video collectors in LatAm
For a first-person video collector, the setup that matters most is concrete: shoot at 1080p/30fps minimum, hold the phone or mount close enough that the hands fill a useful portion of the frame, and keep the action centered as you move. A passing sample proves you can keep hands, object, and surface in frame through a complete task and reach a clear finished state without losing the action. Your profile should also list location, language, available mounts, recording environment, and weekly availability so TrueLabel can match you to eligible work. Briefs are available in Spanish or Portuguese, with English on request, matched to your country. Coordination spans several Latin American zones; each brief lists its review window in your local time so cross-border collectors stay aligned.
What makes a submission review-ready in LatAm
The single most common rejection is letting the object or hands drift out of frame partway through the task. Beyond that single failure, a review-ready first-person video 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. In LatAm that review happens against home kitchens and dining areas, neighborhood markets and small shops, shared building or apartment spaces, and informal workshops and repair benches, with the TrueLabel collector QA team returning outcomes usually within 2 business days of upload.
Recording this role in LatAm
LatAm collector work pulls from several eligible countries, so briefs come in Spanish or Portuguese and review windows are posted in your local time. Typical captures are household, food-prep, and small-commerce sequences filmed on a recent smartphone or wearable. You submit raw clips through TrueLabel, get paid only for accepted footage, and payouts settle in USD. For a first-person video collector, that means filming frame each clip so your hands, the object, and the work surface stay visible for the whole task and lead the shot with the action rather than holding a fixed, scenic camera angle in settings such as home kitchens and dining areas, neighborhood markets and small shops, shared building or apartment spaces, and informal workshops and repair benches. Payouts settle in USD through the rail for your country: SPEI in Mexico, Pix in Brazil, Nequi or local bank transfer in Colombia, and local bank transfer in Chile, Argentina, and Peru. You confirm your method 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 |
|---|---|
| Capture in LatAm | Frame each clip so your hands, the object, and the work surface stay visible for the whole task |
| Capture in LatAm | Lead the shot with the action rather than holding a fixed, scenic camera angle |
| Capture in LatAm | Capture the task from start to finished state in one continuous take where the brief asks for it |
| Capture in LatAm | Keep lighting even so contact points and object detail read clearly on review |
Requirements and review
| Area | What to expect |
|---|---|
| Eligibility | Collectors across eligible LatAm countries work as independent contributors, must be 18 or older, and confirm recording permission for each space they capture. |
| Device | Shoot at 1080p/30fps minimum, hold the phone or mount close enough that the hands fill a useful portion of the frame, and keep the action centered as you move. |
| Language | Briefs are available in Spanish or Portuguese, with English on request, matched to your country. |
| Privacy | No faces, IDs, screens, addresses, payment cards, or private documents in frame; in LatAm take extra care with bystanders and signage when filming home kitchens and dining areas. |
| Payment | Payouts settle in USD through the rail for your country: SPEI in Mexico, Pix in Brazil, Nequi or local bank transfer in Colombia, and local bank transfer in Chile, Argentina, and Peru. You confirm your method during onboarding and accepted work is paid through the twice-weekly queue. |
Privacy and quality expectations
For this location-specific collector role across 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 LatAm when TrueLabel has matching work categories.
Related collector opportunities
FAQ
What makes a first-person video collector submission pass review?
A passing sample proves you can keep hands, object, and surface in frame through a complete task and reach a clear finished state without losing the action.
What is the most common reason first-person video collector footage is rejected?
The single most common rejection is letting the object or hands drift out of frame partway through the task. 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 first-person video collector uploads paid?
For this role, footage is sent back when the action drifts out of frame or the object leaves the shot mid-task. 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 LatAm?
No. Opportunities in LatAm are capture-first. Collectors across eligible LatAm countries work as independent contributors, must be 18 or older, and confirm recording permission for each space they capture.
What language are LatAm briefs written in?
Briefs are available in Spanish or Portuguese, with English on request, matched to your country. Coordination spans several Latin American zones; each brief lists its review window in your local time so cross-border collectors stay aligned.
How and when are LatAm collectors paid?
Accepted work enters the payment queue after review; rejected or duplicate submissions are not paid. Payouts settle in USD through the rail for your country: SPEI in Mexico, Pix in Brazil, Nequi or local bank transfer in Colombia, and local bank transfer in Chile, Argentina, and Peru. You confirm your method during onboarding and accepted work is paid through the twice-weekly queue.
Apply for first-person video collector work in LatAm
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