We create high-quality coding problems for training AI models — drawn from real production repositories, not synthetic puzzles. Your role is to ensure these problems are fair, clear, and technically sound.
The RolePart-Time Code Quality Reviewer | Remote | $40/hr | 0-25 hrs/week
We’re looking for engineers who can trace the intent behind a code change, understand what changes were made and why, and express that clearly in natural language.
This is judgment work, not mechanical testing. You'll make philosophical decisions about fairness and clarity in technical contexts.
What You'll Actually DoReview code changes across unfamiliar repositories and tech stacks
Assess problem fairness: Could a skilled engineer solve this with only the given context?
Evaluate test quality: Do tests properly validate the intended solution?
Write clear justifications for your assessments (2-3 sentences per decision)
Flag coherence issues: Inconsistent artifacts, unclear requirements, missing context
Time commitment: 1-4 hours per problem, fully async — work whenever fits your schedule.
Who Should ApplyIdeal candidates:
PhD students in CS/computational fields seeking long-term flexible income
Open source contributors who care deeply about code quality
Undergrad with at least 1 year in CS, ECE, Computational Biology, or related technical programs
Professional engineers seeking intellectually interesting part-time work
You'll thrive if you:
Have strong software engineering fundamentals
Can work independently with minimal supervision
Write clearly and precisely
Enjoy making judgment calls in ambiguous situations
Stay focused during 1-3 hour review sessions
1+ years of software engineering experience (internships, research projects, or professional work)
Fluent English; strong writing is a must
Responsive, independent, and attentive to detail
0–25 hours per week, flexible
$40/hour for all review work
Performance-based advancement: Top contributors can receive promotions and bonuses
Long-term engagement: We're building a scalable team, not a temporary workforce
15-minute async video interview — answer 4 questions about your technical background and work style
Sample problem review — demonstrate your assessment skills on a real coding problem
Onboarding — join our active problem design engineering community and start reviewing
Q: Is this suitable for PhD students?
Yes — many of our top contributors are PhD students. The work is fully async and fits around research schedules.
Q: Do I need to be available during specific hours?
No. Work whenever you want. Some problem design engineers work weekends, others weekday evenings.
Q: What if I'm not familiar with the programming language in a problem?
That's expected. You're assessing problem fairness and clarity, not implementing solutions. Familiarity with general software engineering principles is what matters.
Q: How quickly can I start?
If you pass the video interview and sample review, you can start within 1-2 weeks.
Q: Is this a path to full-time employment?
This is a long-term contract role, not a pipeline to full-time positions. We value contributors who excel at this specific type of work.
The Widget Factory is the quality assurance division of Idler (YC S25), where we ensure coding problems meet research-grade standards for AI training. Our mission is to build the most reliable QA system for AI coding benchmarks.
Similar Jobs
What you need to know about the NYC Tech Scene
Key Facts About NYC Tech
- Number of Tech Workers: 549,200; 6% of overall workforce (2024 CompTIA survey)
- Major Tech Employers: Capgemini, Bloomberg, IBM, Spotify
- Key Industries: Artificial intelligence, Fintech
- Funding Landscape: $25.5 billion in venture capital funding in 2024 (Pitchbook)
- Notable Investors: Greycroft, Thrive Capital, Union Square Ventures, FirstMark Capital, Tiger Global Management, Tribeca Venture Partners, Insight Partners, Two Sigma Ventures
- Research Centers and Universities: Columbia University, New York University, Fordham University, CUNY, AI Now Institute, Flatiron Institute, C.N. Yang Institute for Theoretical Physics, NASA Space Radiation Laboratory

.png)

