With mturk, you have work you want to get done, and people go look through the HITs for things that fit their abilities.
With fiverr, you have money you want to spend, and you go looking through things people imagine someone might want to pay them to do.
I've used mechanical turk for annotating a training set for automated classification. I cannot imagine what I would use this service for. Claiming this is what mturk should have been assumes that mturk sucks because all the tasks people want to get done are boring.
Agreed. Two separate concepts. The only link is paying someone for a service. However, I've only spent 5 minutes on the site, and I've already spent $10.
It's nothing like MT, but it's a fun site. A friend of a friend contracted someone on fiverr to design a logo for a project he was working on. I saw the logo the fiverr person produced, and it was the lamest thing I'd ever seen. Which you'd expect. But still. Funny.
My experience with fiverr is so far positive, I've set a Gig there some weeks back: I'll tweet about your service to my 18000+ followers (I follow less than 70 peoples) for $5 , it works really good for me: I'm $525 richer since then, but the most important thing, I've learned to deal with customer support, you can't imagine how peoples act even if they just pay a voucher for a service (I guess even if it's free), so no matter what they pay, and how great the ROI is, they will still ask for more, some poeples actually behave like they just hire you full time for $5 , that's the best thing I learned from it (customer can be really rough), and it also helps me validate an experience about twitter advertising and followers behaviour (a couple of peoples complained about the ads, and 1 or 2 unfollowed me, but otherwise, all ok)
I can recommend the service, but you really should know what you are paying for , it may have some Value if you really know what you are doing and you could have a lot from $5 , if you're lucky.
I'm not sure about the MT analogy, but it is Fiverr is a neat concept. Hopefully you can keep the spam down and signal-to-noise ratio up. Also keep improving the reputation system, perhaps with some stats and percentages and filtering and sorting. Would like to be able to favorite people as well (or maybe you can already and I didn't notice the feature).
Seems like a different site than Mechanical Turk. I go to MT to fulfill a need. Fiverr seems like a place I'd go to if I had money to burn on something random.
With mturk, you have work you want to get done, and people go look through the HITs for things that fit their abilities.
With fiverr, you have money you want to spend, and you go looking through things people imagine someone might want to pay them to do.
I've used mechanical turk for annotating a training set for automated classification. I cannot imagine what I would use this service for. Claiming this is what mturk should have been assumes that mturk sucks because all the tasks people want to get done are boring.