On March 19, DoorDash launched a program called Tasks, which redirects its 8 million U.S. delivery couriers toward generating training data for artificial intelligence and robotics systems. Workers can now opt into producing labeled data - images, object classifications, physical demonstrations - that feed the development of automated systems. The announcement is being framed as supplemental income. What it actually represents is a structural realignment of what platform labor produces, and for whom.
The Feedback Loop Nobody Is Naming
The standard narrative about gig workers and automation runs in one direction: robots eventually replace the humans. DoorDash Tasks complicates that picture considerably. Here, the human workers are not being replaced by AI. They are being hired to construct it. This creates a feedback loop that organizational theory has not yet fully addressed. The same population of workers whose labor is most threatened by autonomous delivery systems is now being compensated to accelerate the development of those systems. This is not a contradiction that can be resolved at the level of individual worker incentives. It is a structural problem that requires a different analytical frame.
Rahman (2021) describes the "invisible cage" dynamic in which platform workers operate under algorithmic constraints they can observe but cannot effectively resist. What DoorDash Tasks introduces is a second layer of that cage: workers now participate in building the algorithmic infrastructure that will govern their future. Their awareness of this fact - and there is no reason to assume most will be fully aware - does not translate into structural leverage. This is precisely the awareness-capability gap that runs through the algorithmic literacy literature (Kellogg, Valentine, and Christin, 2020). Knowing that you are training your replacement does not give you the tools to change the terms under which that training occurs.
What Workers Are Actually Producing
The Tasks program is notable because it makes explicit something that has been implicit in platform labor for years. Every delivery completed by a DoorDash courier - every route taken, every customer interaction logged, every timing decision made - has always generated data that the platform aggregates and analyzes. That data improves algorithmic dispatch, demand forecasting, and pricing logic. In that sense, workers have always been producing training data as a byproduct of their primary labor. Tasks formalizes and compensates a specific subset of that production. The structure is not new. The transparency is.
This distinction between routine and adaptive expertise (Hatano and Inagaki, 1986) becomes relevant here in an unexpected way. Couriers who develop adaptive expertise about how the platform operates - who understand the structural logic of dispatch algorithms rather than just the procedural steps of completing a delivery - are better positioned to evaluate what Tasks is asking of them and what it produces. Workers operating at the procedural level, executing steps without structural understanding, are less likely to recognize the second-order implications of their participation. Schema induction, the kind of structural literacy the ALC framework argues for, is not just an academic concern in this context. It has direct implications for how labor populations understand and respond to programs like this one.
The Wage Effect That Precedes Displacement
A separate piece of reporting this week noted that AI investment does not require layoffs to affect worker earnings. The mechanism is subtler: productivity gains from AI tools allow companies to reduce headcount growth, suppress wage increases, or restructure compensation without triggering the public visibility that mass layoffs generate. DoorDash Tasks fits this pattern. It does not eliminate workers. It diversifies what those workers produce while simultaneously building toward a future in which fewer of them are needed for last-mile delivery.
Schor et al. (2020) argue that platform workers exist in a condition of structured dependence - they retain nominal independence while the platform controls the conditions under which income is accessible. Tasks extends this dependence into a new domain. Workers who rely on the platform for primary income now have an incentive to participate in AI training programs because incremental earnings matter at that income level. The platform has, in effect, monetized the vulnerability it helped create.
What This Means for Platform Coordination Theory
The ALC framework I am developing argues that platforms generate competence endogenously through participation. DoorDash Tasks introduces a variation on that claim: platforms can also extract competence endogenously, converting the tacit knowledge embedded in delivery work into structured training inputs. This is not the same as competence development. It is competence harvesting. Whether these two processes - development and extraction - operate on the same populations simultaneously, and what the distributional consequences of that overlap are, strikes me as one of the more pressing empirical questions the current moment is putting on the table for platform labor researchers.
The program launched three months ago. The data it generates will inform systems that will operate for years. The lag between those two timeframes is where the organizational theory needs to focus.
Roger Hunt