If I Made American Arbitration Association Rates, I’d Still Be Freelance

Stenonymous posts American Arbitration Association Rates for stenographic court reporting.
Stenonymous posts American Arbitration Association Rates for “AI-powered” transcription

Two things.

Number one, my backstory is that I come from undervalued NYC reporting where the companies used social pressure to pit us against each other. In 2010 I was making $2.80 a page. Later came to find people were making more than that in the 80s or 90s. If the corporate mooks have ever wondered why my publishing focuses so much on them and the disgusting things that they do, they need only look in a mirror. They created me. Maybe I should thank them?

It’s also why I don’t believe in irreversible shortage. Not one entity in this whole field has made a real effort to pull court reporters from undervalued NYC. The most we’ve had is our “court family” spreading the word that the New York State Unified Court System is the place to be. And guess what? When we made the effort, we fixed a localized Bronx shortage.

Number two, the American Arbitration Association is fleecing people through their Optima “service partner.”

Why? Simple business sense. If you have AI worth a damn, you run audio through the system, it pops out a finished product, and you send it off. You could literally pay one person to handle hundreds of transcripts a day. You would not, by any stretch of the human imagination, need $3.95 per page. So it’s pretty clear to me that they’re likely using human transcribers to fix AI garbage and calling it AI-powered. Human-powered AI, brought to you by Liars Incorporated.

Please don’t take this as me saying we are irreplaceable though. We are 100% replaceable. It might not be right, fair, business savvy, or technologically sound, but they could do it. I mean, look at VITAC, despite knowing that it would mean lesser quality for the people they serve, they fired a bunch of stenographers, or so I heard some time ago. They can do whatever they want. The only thing that might deter them from doing whatever they want is backlash, pushback, a fight. People are conflict avoidant. It’s in all the surveys and studies. In a room of 100 people, maybe 6 are fighters, so there’s a good chance whoever’s sitting in the boss seat isn’t a real fighter and will cave to pressure. It’s as simple as that when it comes to our continued existence. The people above us need to know, understand, feel, and believe that we will absolutely drag them down with us without mercy or remorse. They take advantage of our silence and compliance. They take advantage of our kindness and compassion. They take advantage of our willingness to live and let live.

No longer, I say. This is what I bring to the table. I use the money you send me to fight for you using the best communication network on Earth, the internet. I’m good at it. I have a style my allies can trust and my enemies underestimate. It’s something so deliberate that I’m curious whether my closest friends really understand why I do some of what I do. You know how people used to say don’t write anything in an email you wouldn’t want read in court? There’s another simple truth. Write anything someone else wouldn’t want read in court, and suddenly you become untouchable. And in fact the best of my work goes largely unsung and never ends up on Stenonymous because of that.

Not my fault. I didn’t design things this way. But here I am. Hello, world.

Christopher Day makes himself a meme, because why not?
Christopher Day shares a reaction to a meme of his face.

“Throw me all your shade but I’ma own it
I’ma want to Edgar Allen Poe it
Not up for discussion, I’ma close it
Yeah, you don’t want me to be your opponent.”

Voices by Vanessa Campagna