If you can build clean, standards-based HTML and you actually understand the JavaScript/TypeScript layer that makes it come alive, this role is a strong fit. You’ll pressure-test AI models with real frontend engineering scenarios, then document what fails so the model learns to produce sharper, safer, more reliable code.
About Invisible
Invisible supports AI development by producing high-quality training data and expert evaluation workflows. They work with specialists who can validate outputs, catch failure modes, and improve model reasoning for real-world engineering use.
Schedule
Contract, freelance, remote (U.S. listed).
Hours vary based on your availability and project demand.
You provide a secure computer and high-speed internet connection.
What You’ll Do
⦁ Converse with AI models on software engineering tasks and technical scenarios using HTML (and related web stack topics)
⦁ Verify logical accuracy, coding fluency, and solution completeness
⦁ Evaluate code quality for clarity, maintainability, standards compliance, and secure practices
⦁ Capture reproducible error traces and document recurring failure patterns
⦁ Challenge the model on complex topics (async behavior, RESTful API integration, architecture decisions, debugging)
⦁ Suggest improvements to prompts, evaluation methods, and quality metrics based on what you observe
What You Need
⦁ Strong HTML proficiency (beyond basic markup, including real-world structure and standards)
⦁ Solid professional experience with JavaScript and/or TypeScript
⦁ Strong CS and engineering fundamentals (architecture thinking, debugging, clean design)
⦁ Ability to clearly explain reasoning and “show your work” in writing
⦁ High attention to detail and consistency when evaluating technical outputs
⦁ Degree in CS/Software Engineering (BS/MS/PhD) is ideal; open-source work, technical writing, or equivalent experience valued
Benefits
⦁ Flexible, remote contract work
⦁ Pay range of $6–$65/hour (rate based on experience, expertise, and location)
⦁ Hands-on work with cutting-edge AI tools and evaluation workflows
⦁ Direct impact on model reliability, safety, and usefulness
⦁ Project-based opportunities that can expand with performance and availability
Quick backbone check: “HTML specialist” is a misleading title. They want a web engineer who can reason and write clearly, not someone who only knows tags. If your JS/TS isn’t solid, skip this one.
If you’re ready to turn your web stack skill into real model improvements, apply now and set a rate that matches your depth.
Happy Hunting,
~Two Chicks…