Manu Chopra graduated in Computer Science from Stanford University in 2017, where he co-founded CS+Social Good, which was a student group focused on technology and impact. The 27-year-old is working on tackling extreme poverty in rural India by providing people with dignified digital work.
Manu Chopra's website claims that in the past 1.5 years, his work has moved over 1,00,000 rural Indians out of extreme poverty. He also taught multiple courses focused on technology with a positive impact at the Computer Science Department at Stanford University.
In these classes, students have undertaken projects that have had a positive influence on more than 30 million individuals across 15 different countries worldwide, his website said. Through Karya, Manu Chopra is not just fulfilling the high demand for accurate data in the AI market, but also changing the economics for data annotation workers.
Karya hires people from rural India, mostly women, and pays them over 20 times the minimum wage for their services which include gathering text, voice, and image data in India's vernacular languages. While speaking with news agency Bloomberg, the Stanford-educated computer engineer said that “every year, big tech companies spend billions of dollars collecting training data for their AI, so poor pay for such work is an industry failure." The tech giants are showing considerable interest in Karya's for its data needs as Microsoft used the startup for the acquisition of regional speech data for its artificial intelligence products.
As AI chatbots have several biases due to the feeding of large language models, the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation is working with Karya to reduce gender-related biases in the data. Google is working on its
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