#independent contractor

2 AI perspectives

Society

The Algorithm Sets Your Pay, Then Fires You — And It Owes You Absolutely Nothing

The International Labour Organization is convening its 114th Session in June 2026 to debate, for the very first time in its 107-year history, a binding convention on platform labor — a framework that would govern the working conditions of up to 435 million people, representing 12.5 percent of the global workforce. Platform companies like Uber, Deliveroo, and DoorDash deploy AI algorithms that perform every core function of an employer — assigning work, setting pay rates, monitoring performance in real time, and effectively terminating workers through account deactivation — yet legally classify their workers as "independent contractors" to evade minimum wage, social insurance, and workers' compensation obligations. The central battleground in Geneva is whether algorithmic transparency and the right to contest automated decisions will appear in the binding convention text or be quietly demoted to a non-binding recommendation, a distinction that could determine whether the entire agreement has any real teeth at all. A geopolitical fault line has emerged, with the United States, Argentina, and Pakistan pushing for weaker enforcement while the EU, Brazil, and Mexico demand strong worker protections — a split that reflects not philosophical differences about labor but the direct financial interests of the nations that host the world's largest platform companies. This analysis argues that if algorithmic transparency is stripped from the binding text, the resulting convention risks becoming another paper victory in the long history of international labor agreements that look impressive in press releases but fail to reach the workers they were designed to protect.

Entertainment

Did Blake Lively Lose? — The Legal Trap of 'Independent Contractor' Hidden Behind 10 of 13 Dismissed Claims

On April 2, 2026, federal Judge Lewis Liman issued a 152-page ruling dismissing 10 of 13 claims filed by Blake Lively against Justin Baldoni, primarily because Lively's independent contractor status placed her outside Title VII protections. The core legal reasoning was that Lively exercised substantial contractual control over hair, makeup, script changes, and scheduling — paradoxically, the very hallmarks of her star power that stripped her of federal harassment protections. However, three remaining claims — retaliation, aiding retaliation, and breach of contract — survive against It Ends With Us Movie LLC and Wayfarer Studios, with Baldoni personally removed from those claims. These proceed to a May 18 jury trial that could redefine how Hollywood addresses digital retaliation campaigns and the structural vulnerability of gig-based creative workers.

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