A major new report from global research network Fairwork and backed by the University of Oxford and WZB Berlin has concluded that most of the world’s leading online work platforms are failing to uphold even the most basic labour standards. The Fairwork Cloudwork Ratings 2025, assesses 16 of the world’s most widely used cloudwork platforms on five core principles: fair pay, conditions, contracts, management, and representation.
Online gig economy work, also known as cloudwork, typically involves remote, task-based jobs like data labelling, transcription, software development, and design. Many of these tasks are fundamental for developing AI systems, making these roles a crucial part of the AI boom and the broader digital landscape. It’s a growing sector, with the World Bank estimating up to 435 million people worldwide are already working this way. But Fairwork’s findings reveal that behind this rapid growth lies a system where profit routinely trumps protection, leaving millions of workers unprotected.
Only 4 out of 16 platforms (25 per cent) could show that workers consistently earn at least the local minimum wage after costs. The remaining 12, including Amazon Mechanical Turk, Fiverr, Freelancer, and Upwork, did not provide evidence that they guarantee payment for every completed task or that workers earn at least minimum wage.
Fairwork also surveyed over 750 workers across 100 countries. Of those, 31 per cent had experienced non-payment, and 38 per cent reported late payments. One worker from Nigeria, registered on Amazon Mechanical Turk, told researchers: “I wish I could get my money in my bank account rather than gift cards.” This comes despite the online gig economy being valued at $557 billion in 2024 and projected to grow to $647 billion in 2025.
Over half of platforms include contract clauses that actively weaken workers’ rights such as vague job descriptions, blanket liability clauses, and with lack of transparency. Only 6 out of 16 platforms (38 per cent) demonstrated contracts that fairly reflect the work being done.
Workers are also excluded from decision-making: while 6 platforms (38 per cent) now formally recognise the right to organise – up from just 2 last year – some allow collective bargaining or shared governance but none could show they are actively engaging in these processes.
Most platforms fail to support workers’ wellbeing: over half provide no wellbeing support at all. Additionally, only 7 out of 16 have policies to guard against health and safety risks such as burnout or back pain.
The 2025 ratings reflect the largest wave of platform improvements since the Fairwork project began. Through direct engagement, Fairwork has helped eight platforms make 56 changes since 2023, from updating contracts to improving dispute resolution and pay transparency. These changes could benefit as many as two million workers.
But the vast majority of platforms still fail to meet even the minimum standards. Without stronger regulation and enforcement, millions will remain in precarious, low-paid, and unprotected work. Fairwork is calling for stronger national and international regulation against these platforms.
“This report lays bare a brutal truth: the global online gig economy is failing the vast majority of its workers,” commented Dr Jonas C. L. Valente, postdoctoral researcher at the Oxford Internet Institute and co-lead of the Cloudwork Project. “These are the invisible workers making possible the AI systems and apps we use everyday. While some platforms are showing that change is possible, the basic rights workers have long expected are not ensured to millions. Voluntary improvements have happened but have proved insufficient and will never be enough.
“We urgently need governments and regulators to step up and hold platforms accountable,” Dr Valente added, “whether through global frameworks, due diligence laws, or stronger platform work directives. Without action, millions of people will remain trapped in low-paid, insecure digital labour with no voice, no rights, and no protection.”
