India’s Ministry of Electronics and Information Technology is examining the consent and data collection practices of startups that record home-service workers and sell the footage to robotics labs. The probe comes weeks after Human Archive, a startup founded by four UC Berkeley and Stanford researchers, announced $8.2 million in seed funding to scale exactly that kind of operation across India.
The leading organizations in the funding round included Wing Venture Capital and NVP Capital, along with Y Combinator, and angel investors from companies such as OpenAI, Nvidia, Google, and Meta.
The money funds camera-equipped headsets and custom sensor hardware deployed with gig workers who clean homes, cook in cloud kitchens, and staff hotels. Robotics labs that are training machines to perform physical tasks will buy the resulting footage.
According to CEO Raj Patel, the firm is running over a thousand headsets in various parts of India, and is developing gloves, motion capture suits, and wrist cameras to complement its video feeds.
Human Archive pays workers $1 per hour. Rival firms pay between $2.63 and $4.20, according to ET. According to Patel, the gap reflects lower overhead from operating directly in India.
Workers interviewed by MIT Technology Review said none knew how recordings would be stored, shared, or used by the robotics companies purchasing them.
“It is important that if workers are engaging in this, that they are informed by the companies themselves of the intention … where this kind of technology might go and how that might affect them longer term,” said Yasmine Kotturi, a professor of human-centered computing at the University of Maryland, Baltimore County.
Human Archive said its contracts comply with India’s Digital Personal Data Protection (DPDP) Act, that it displays a privacy notice with consent details, and that all footage is anonymized with faces blurred.
The DPDP Act is still in its early stages of enforcement. The ministry’s review could set a precedent for how regulators treat video data collected from workers and the homes they enter.
Urban Company CEO Abhiraj Singh Bhal posted on X that his company would not participate in data collection from workers. Patel fired back that Urban Company would “soon be forced to reconsider or risk losing relevance.”
Co-founder Rushil Agarwal posted that Pronto founder Anjali Sardana had “laughed at him and called him stupid” when he pitched the idea.
Pronto confirmed early discussions before walking away.
According to reports, Pronto conducted separate tests for opt-in recording while performing household chores. The evaluation conducted by the IT Ministry came after media coverage of the pilot and the ongoing debate about which firms should be allowed to record in Indian households.
As Cryptopolitan reported in February, India positioned itself at the 2026 AI Summit as the leader of a Global South push to shape AI policy.
The government’s willingness to investigate a Y Combinator-backed startup within weeks of its funding announcement signals that the push extends to policing how foreign-backed companies collect data from Indian workers.
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