試す 金 - 無料
Two films show our present is the future we once feared
Mint Bangalore
|June 07, 2025
'Humans in the Loop' and 'Taak' are rooted in real-life premises, where the tech burdens fall on the marginalized
Hindi films often turn to dystopia to grapple with technological dread, then filmmakers Udit Khurana and Aranya Sahay chart a more unsettling course—rooting their narratives in real-life premises.
For Khurana, the starting point for Taak lay in 2020 headlines that detailed how Chandigarh's sanitation workers were being forced to wear GPS-enabled tracking watches under the guise of efficiency.
Sahay's Humans in the Loop, on the other hand, draws from reporting that illuminated the invisible workforce sustaining artificial intelligence: indigenous women employed in data-labelling offices set up by tech companies across rural India.
Both films don't imagine the future as much as reveal the overlooked realities of the present where the burdens of surveillance and automation fall most heavily on marginalized lives.
Since its premiere at Mumbai MAMI Film Festival last year, Sahay's 72-minute feature debut has had an award-garlanded festival run, most recently winning the Grand Jury Prize at Indian Film Festival of Los Angeles (IFFLA) in May.
Set in Jharkhand, Humans in the Loop follows Nehma (Sonal Madhushankar), a tribal woman who returns to her ancestral village after a separation.
In order to gain custody of her teenage daughter and infant son, Nehma—a college graduate—takes up a job as a data-labeller at a nearby centre, effectively feeding information into systems that power an American tech company.
Alongside other women hunched in front of their computer screens, Nehma spends her time labelling images of crops, weed and pesticides.
On some days, she marks parts of the human body—right arm, left knee—so that when the algorithms are eventually shown a hand or a leg, they know what they are looking at.
And on others, she is training it to recognise a football foul or differentiate between turmeric and ginger.
このストーリーは、Mint Bangalore の June 07, 2025 版からのものです。
Magzter GOLD を購読すると、厳選された何千ものプレミアム記事や、10,000 以上の雑誌や新聞にアクセスできます。
すでに購読者ですか? サインイン
Mint Bangalore からのその他のストーリー
Mint Bangalore
Vedanta’s bond plan faces query on $600 mn loan funds
$250 mn of $500mn loan still not drawn: Vedanta
1 mins
September 30, 2025
Mint Bangalore
WeWork India preps ₹3,000 cr IPO in share sale by promoters
WeWork India Management Ltd, the country’s largest flexible workspace operator, will launch its initial public offering (IPO) on Friday as its shareholders plan to raise up t0 ₹3,000 crore.
1 mins
September 30, 2025
Mint Bangalore
Top exec’s exit puts focus on TCS Al woes
itself was overhauled at least three times in the past three years. The Mumbai-based firm isalso laying off 12,200 mid-to senior-level executives, or 2% of its workforce, to become “future ready”.
2 mins
September 30, 2025
Mint Bangalore
Dubai halts HDFC from adding new customers
HDFC Bank Ltd, the largest private sector lender, has been banned from onboarding new customers at its Dubai branch after a regulator flagged lapses in its processes. The bank was penalized by a Dubai regulator for offering financial services to local clients who were not onboarded at the Dubai International Financial Centre, the Mumbai-based lender said in an exchange filing late on Friday.
1 min
September 30, 2025
Mint Bangalore
Enviable dilemma
It's a dilemma that the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) wouldn't mind being caught in.
1 min
September 30, 2025
Mint Bangalore
Walmart CEO issues wake-up call: ‘AI Is going to change literally every job’
Walmart executives aren’tsugarcoating the message: Artificial intelligence will wipe out some jobs and reshape its workforce.
4 mins
September 30, 2025
Mint Bangalore
Personal shoppers lift India’s premium fashion retail sales
Stylists help customers mix and match outfits, boosting confidence and setting brands apart
2 mins
September 30, 2025

Mint Bangalore
Russia's exports to India falter, UAE rises as formidable competitor
India’s imports from Russia declined 5.54% to $26.46 billion in the first five months of the current financial year, bringing the country’s secondlargest supplier of goods close to being overtaken by third-placed United Arab Emirates (UAE), government data showed.
1 mins
September 30, 2025

Mint Bangalore
RACING AHEAD: ARE AUTO STOCKS STILL A BUY?
India's auto sector is displaying all the signs of a classic bull market. But there are risks
8 mins
September 30, 2025
Mint Bangalore
Govt warns Kerala on amoeba case surge
The central government has asked Kerala authorities to step up monitoring after the state reported a surge in cases of a rare brain-eating amoeba. Kerala health minister Veena George has said the state has recorded 80 cases and 21 deaths so far in 2025.
1 min
September 30, 2025
Listen
Translate
Change font size