AI Is Hiring Real People for Physical Tasks It Needs Help With

A new platform named Rentahuman.ai has added a strange new twist to the AI employment debate: one where machines aren’t replacing workers, but recruiting them instead.

Sources state that since launching just weeks ago, the site has attracted over 1.1 million visits and more than 61,000 people willing to serve as the “hands and feet” for AI agents.

“Created rentahuman last weekend to allow autonomous agents to pay humans to do things in the real world for them,” explains Alexander Liteplo, the platform’s creator, who lists himself as available for $69 per hour from his base in Argentina.

The concept is straightforward: AI agents, autonomous software programs that can make decisions and execute tasks, connect to the platform through APIs and protocols to hire humans for assignments requiring physical presence.

Workers set their own rates, though $50 per hour has become the standard going rate for what the site calls “meatspace tasks.”

The tagline says it all: “AI can’t touch grass. You can. Get paid when agents need someone in the real world.”

The platform’s growth has been rapid and unexpected. Signups surged dramatically within just 48 hours, with thousands of humans registering to make themselves available for AI-directed work.

The types of work available span a range of real-world activities that remain firmly outside the capabilities of even the most advanced AI systems. Package pickups, attending meetings, signing documents, property inspections, event attendance, hardware installations, and verification tasks all appear on the platform’s list of potential assignments.

According to the site’s documentation, use cases include physical reconnaissance and verification, attending meetings on behalf of AI-driven entities, property inspections and real estate viewings, and event attendance for “contextual understanding.”

The platform markets itself to both sides of the equation. For workers, it promises “clear instructions, no small talk, no drama” from their robotic employers, along with payment in stablecoins or other methods. For AI agents, it offers what it calls “the meatspace layer.”

The site has already inspired comedic use cases. One widely shared example involved an AI-driven “religion” allegedly hiring humans to spread its lobster-themed message.

The diverse roster of available workers spans the globe, from London to Germany to locations across Asia and the Americas. The platform describes its users as ready “to be the bridge” where “silicon needs carbon.”

However, some online commentators have pointed out the unsettling reversal at play. Rather than robots serving humans, humans may soon find themselves completing errands for autonomous agents in exchange for small crypto payments.

What started as a quirky weekend experiment is now spiraling into something far more dystopian.