Openai Announces AI-Powered Hiring Platform to Take on Linkedin
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OpenAI has announced an AI-powered hiring platform that could potentially disrupt the job market and LinkedIn's dominance, sparking discussions about its implications on hiring practices and the role of AI in the workforce.
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During the hiring spree it seemed like other than ensuring that a candidate was able to (or was able to be trained to) operate at the average expectations of a role's level.
With the demand for software engineers dipping below the supply, recent anecdotes have painted a different picture.
Some of the rejection reasons I've heard for candidates that have otherwise passed all rounds:
* They don't have enough experience in our stack (need to be able to hit the ground running)
* Their experience in our stack, while of a suitable duration, was 2 or 3 jobs ago, so it's not "recent enough" to hit the ground running
* They have worked too many jobs within a timeframe
* They've worked too few jobs in their career
While these of course vary company to company, the former 2 are interesting in this context in that I wonder how an automated candidate <-> requisition matcher would go about gathering data to make it's decision. Will the stack you work in now cement you into that stack for a longer period of time? Will lack of blog posts or other publicly scrapable details about your knowledge or abilities with certain technology impact your matching score?
Related to the above, if those get gamified, I wonder how that might affect a surge of slightly altered blog posts to make one look more experienced with a technology. And when will the SaaS startup get created that will auto-post technical blogs copied/altered from other existing tech blogs.
It will be interesting to see how this all progresses.
Honestly dodged a major bullet there. Talk about red flags
Normally people hate LinkedIn for the thought leader broetry and begrudgingly wade through that crap because they want to use LinkedIn to find jobs. You think the worst part of LinkedIn is that you can find jobs through it‽
(https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=45131095)
Uhhh, not really if it's focused on AI-specific talent.
Instead of this TechCrunch reaching for drama just read the announcement post:
https://openai.com/index/expanding-economic-opportunity-with...
I know this is going to get ridiculed since we are in an AI winter as of a month ago, but if (and when) significantly more capable agents hit the market (not AGI, but not dummies like the current ones), the only way OpenAI will have the market to themselves (or convince investors that it does), is to control more of the value chain.