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Shift will tidy up your home for free, but will record the chores to train robots

Shift will tidy up your home for free, but will record the chores to train robots

Everyday chores are becoming the raw material for future home robots

Shift

Shift is offering to clean homes for free, but there is one important condition. The company will record those chores to build training data for future home robots.

The New York-based startup is currently offering free cleaning services, in which a vetted operator visits a home and wears a camera-equipped device while performing routine household work. The footage can then help AI systems understand how people clean homes outside controlled lab settings.

Your messy home is valuable AI training data

AI companies have already used text, images, and videos from the internet to train software models. But robots need a different kind of data. They need to understand physical spaces, household objects, and the messy logic of everyday chores.

Tesla

A robot cannot learn home cleaning only from staged lab videos. Real homes have cluttered tables, dishes stacked in awkward ways, stains in corners, and objects placed where they should not be. That kind of chaos is what makes household footage useful.

Shift is not the only company chasing this kind of physical AI data. In India, startups and data vendors are already building businesses around this demand, paying workers to record first-person videos of everyday tasks and supplying that footage to AI companies. For robotics firms, ordinary human labour is becoming valuable training material.

This is where it starts to feel a bit dystopian

Cleaning may only be the start. In the announcement video, Shift says it eventually plans to move into other areas like plumbing, cooking, and building.

Today, we’re launching shift. We’re starting by cleaning your apartment in New York City, for free.

Here’s how it works. Book a shift cleaning. A vetted shift operator comes to your home wearing one of our devices. They clean. They leave. You pay nothing.

In exchange, we record… pic.twitter.com/oBrCXcEz5G

— shift (@joinshiftX) May 28, 2026

For years, the fear around AI has mostly been about office jobs. Writers, coders, designers, and customer support teams have already felt the pressure, and in some cases, that fear has started turning into job losses.

Trades have largely escaped that conversation because physical work is harder to automate. A chatbot can write an email, but it cannot fix a leaking pipe or clean a messy kitchen. Companies like Shift are trying to close that gap by collecting footage of people doing those exact tasks.

AI and robotics may still need time to match the efficiency and precision of a human worker. But watching companies collect this kind of data to train advanced robots feels like the opening scene of the kind of sci-fi movie that does not end well for humans.

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The successful experimentation points toward a new model for rehabilitation robotics, based on experiential learning.

In a neuro-robotics lab at the University of Southern California, a small mechanical hand heard a melody for the first time and played it back in a single attempt, without any sheet music, pre-loaded scores, or weeks of supervised training and practice (via USC Viterbi). 

The system is called the Musician Hand. It has four fingers, each moved by a tendon connected to a small electric motor, mirroring how muscles actually pull tendons in a human hand. It was built by doctoral candidate Hesam Azadjou under the direction of Professor Francisco Valero-Cuevas. 

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Source: Digital Trends | Read the Full Story…

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