The Specific Problem This Week Surfaces
A recent report on Uber AI Solutions reveals a striking organizational contradiction: the company pays contractors up to $150 per hour for AI training work, yet provides no formal onboarding and schedules hours that vary unpredictably from week to week (Business News, 2025). This is not incidental. It is a governance choice, and it tells us something precise about how platform organizations understand, or systematically misunderstand, the relationship between worker competence and coordination infrastructure.
High Pay Without Onboarding Is Not Generosity
The instinct is to read the $150 hourly rate as evidence that Uber values this workforce. The absence of onboarding suggests the opposite reading is more accurate. When an organization sets compensation high while refusing to invest in the procedural scaffolding that helps workers orient themselves, it is effectively purchasing output while remaining agnostic about the conditions that produce it. This mirrors what Kellogg, Valentine, and Christin (2020) describe as the algorithmic management tendency to extract measurable outputs while externalizing the developmental costs that produce capability in the first place.
The variance this creates is not accidental. Workers arriving with prior AI annotation experience, domain knowledge, or existing mental models of what the platform rewards will perform at entirely different levels than workers arriving without those resources - even when both groups receive identical pay rates and identical (nonexistent) onboarding. This is a clean instance of what I argue in my dissertation framework: power-law distributions in platform work emerge from algorithmic amplification of initial competence differences, not from differential effort or access (Schor et al., 2020). When you remove onboarding, you do not create a meritocracy. You make initial conditions determinative.
The Structural Logic Behind Removing Onboarding
There is an organizational theory explanation for why this arrangement persists. Hatano and Inagaki (1986) distinguished between routine expertise, which is reproducible within a known procedure set, and adaptive expertise, which allows a worker to respond effectively to novel problem structures. AI training work - labeling edge cases, ranking model outputs, identifying failure modes - is precisely the kind of task that requires adaptive expertise. It cannot, by definition, be fully proceduralized, because the value of the human contribution lies in exercising judgment that the model does not yet possess.
This creates a genuine governance dilemma. If you cannot write a procedure that captures the judgment you need, onboarding loses its obvious form. But the response Uber AI Solutions appears to have settled on, paying well and providing nothing, is not a solution to that dilemma. It is an abdication of it. The absence of onboarding in this context functions less as a neutral design choice and more as a mechanism that filters for workers who already possess the relevant schema - which means the platform is systematically dependent on a competence it did not develop and cannot reliably reproduce.
Chaotic Scheduling as an Algorithmic Coordination Signal
The scheduling dimension of this story deserves separate attention. Contractors report that hours vary dramatically week to week, with no predictable rhythm. Within the ALC framework I am developing, this is not merely a quality-of-life problem. Unpredictable scheduling disrupts the iterative feedback cycles through which workers in algorithmically-mediated environments develop structural understanding of how the platform actually works (Rahman, 2021). Stable participation patterns allow workers to build what Gentner (1983) calls structural mappings - relational schemas that transfer across task variations. Irregular participation prevents that accumulation.
The practical implication is that chaotic scheduling and absent onboarding interact to produce a workforce that is perpetually reorienting rather than accumulating adaptive expertise. The $150 hourly rate compensates for scarcity of qualified workers but does nothing to address the structural conditions that make workers scarce in the first place.
What This Reveals About AI Governance at Scale
The Uber AI Solutions case is a useful specimen of a broader governance failure that is likely to become more visible as demand for AI training labor grows. Organizations that need high-judgment human input to improve their models are structurally incentivized to externalize the development costs of that judgment. But as Hancock, Naaman, and Levy (2020) note, AI-mediated communication systems depend on the quality of human inputs in ways that are not always legible until model performance degrades. The governance choice to pay for output without investing in the competence infrastructure that produces it is not a stable equilibrium. It is a deferred cost.
The more precise organizational question is not whether this arrangement is fair to workers, though that is a legitimate concern. The more precise question is whether organizations building AI systems on top of a high-pay, no-onboarding, chaotic-scheduling contractor model are actually coordinating the competence they need, or merely purchasing the appearance of it.
Roger Hunt