If you have ever yelled at an AI chatbot for forgetting something you just said, congratulations, you are now job ready. A startup called Memvid is offering $800 for a single day of work where your only task is to bully AI. Yes, professionally.
The role is exactly as chaotic as it sounds. You will spend 8 hours talking to chatbots, asking them to remember things, watching them fail, and then asking more questions again. Your job is to document every frustrating loop and each detail or context the AI forgets.
How AI keeps forgetting and why this job exists
Most AI chatbots sound smart until you talk to them long enough. Then they start to forget the context, drop details, ignore instructions and start giving contradicting answers.
This happens because many AI chatbots rely on limited context windows instead of real memory. Once conversations reset or get longer, earlier details simply vanish, and the AI starts behaving like your previous chat does not exist. That is why you have to repeat your instructions again.
Even with companies like Google adding memory to Gemini so it can recall past chats, and Anthropic making Claude remember conversations for all users, users are still facing AI memory issues.
Memvid is building a solution to fix this by creating a persistent memory layer that allows AI models to remember past conversations and important context across sessions.
What it takes to be an ‘AI Bully’

The job description is refreshingly simple. No degree, coding skills, or experience required. You just need to be over 18, with strong opinions about tech, patient enough to repeat questions, and frustrated enough to care when AI gets it wrong.
You also need to be comfortable on camera since the entire session will be recorded for promotional use. The job application for AI Bully even asks you to describe your most annoying AI experience and explain why you deserve the role.
For now, only one person gets picked for this remote gig, which pays $100/hr. But Memvid might hire more candidates down the road.
And if that was not worrying enough, a recent study found that AI agents can now team up to spread misinformation on their own, basically turning into self-running propaganda machines.
