More employers are using AI to hire workers, but one city is pushing back


More employers are using artificial intelligence to hire workers. It can speed up the process from recruitment to initial workplace evaluations.

If you're applying for a job, you likely won't know whether there are AI tools looking at your resume. New York University’s director of the Center for Responsible AI [at NYU Tandon], Julia Stoyanovich, compares this to a nutrition label. Without it, we wouldn't know exactly what we're eating.

“The burden of disclosing this has to be on the producer of the food in the food example and here on the vendor of the tool, as well as on the employer who is using that tool, is to tell people that they will be screened by a machine for any number of reasons, but really just to not deny us our agency as people right. I mean, we have a right to know and to then act accordingly,” said Stoyanovich.

She says that means having the option of requesting a human to look at your application instead.

“The danger with this is that individuals who are disadvantaged historically in this process will suffer an even greater disadvantage, so if somebody who is disabled, for example, says, ‘I cannot be evaluated by this process because it will treat me unfairly with respect to my disability, I need accommodations,’ the employer in fact should be compelled to provide such accommodation,” said Stoyanovich.

New York City is the first to propose regulation on AI hiring tools.

The Center for Responsible AI says there is currently no data on how often cities use AI hiring tools.

Julia Stoyanovich, director of the Center for Responsible AI at NYU Tandon comments on the use of AI in hiring