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A Chinese AI Model Just Shot to Number One on the Charts, Sending Shockwaves Through the American Tech Industry Tech Bros Puzzled by Why AI Hasn't "Massively Disrupted" Books Yet AI Companies Are Learning an Ironic Lesson as the People They Pay to Improve Their Chatbots Are Just Feeding AI Slop Into Them Sports Journalists Asked Microsoft’s Copilot to Predict World Cup Matches, and the Results May Surprise You Researchers Put AI Models in Charge of Analyzing Sports, and They Choked Spectacularly Fans Aghast as New York Jets Say They’re Switching to AI Companies That Adopted AI Agents Alarmed to Discover They’re Botching Incredibly Important Tasks Hackers Find That Inaudible Sounds Hidden in Podcasts or Random Videos Can Hijack Your AI Voice Chatbot Democrats’ 2024 Election Autopsy Shows Signs of Sloppy AI Generation Being a Crappy Boss to AI Chatbots Pushes Them Toward Spouting Marxist Rhetoric and Organizing With Their Compatriots, Researchers Find Amazon Employees Forced to Hit Quotas on AI Use, Immediately Start Using it for Everything Except Work These Smart Glasses That Show Captions of What Everyone’s Saying Without a Creepy Spy Camera Actually Seem Pretty Awesome The AI Industry Is Secretly Powered by Homeless People ChatGPT Is Saying VWeird Things in Chinese America Trembles as Transportation Secretary Announces Plans for Air Traffic Controllers to Lean on AI Tools Today Is the Day Anthropic Promised That Fully Autonomous Employees Would Be Tearing Through the Business World China Is Starting to Pull Ahead of US in AI Race Berklee College of Music Students Furious That It’s Offering an AI “Songwriting” Class Usually, Young People Embrace New Technology. Gen Z’s Attitude Toward AI Should Worry the Entire Tech Industry Sam Altman’s Coworkers Say He Can Barely Code and Misunderstands Basic Machine Learning Concepts
AI Appears to Be Trapping Certain Job Applicants in a Limbo Where They Never Get an Interview for “Reasons” That Are Completely Unfair
Joe Wilkins · 2026-05-15 · via Futurism

A person sitting at a desk with a laptop and a coffee cup, holding their head in their hands in a gesture of stress or frustration. The image has a stylized color effect with the person and laptop in bright orange, a large yellow circle in the background, and a grid pattern behind them.

Illustration by Tag Hartman-Simkins / Futurism. Source: Getty Images

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For workers already enmeshed in the US workforce, AI is akin to a far-off asteroid, a looming threat that could impact all life on Earth. Our best experts can’t agree on its trajectory or even its distance from our planet, but knowledge of its presence is enough to throw society into a fervor. There’s no way to know: it could hit with such force that it lays waste to all but a chosen few, or it might miss us entirely, as gravitational forces alter the conditions of a flight path not yet written in the stars.

Then there are the masses of unemployed — maybe they’re stranded astronauts, in this tortured metaphor — for whom worrying about the asteroid with two feet on solid ground would be a luxury. For these spacefarers, the asteroid takes a back seat to the more pressing issue of returning home. Yet the asteroid is already making that increasingly impossible, its gravitational force pulling their spacecraft further from the trajectory they need to make it back Earthside.

This is the situation for disenfranchised workers across the world. As many debate whether AI will automate all jobs in service of a privileged few, others live with the reality that it’s already made entering the workforce a Herculean task. It’s not an automation story in the traditional sense, but an enshittification one, where many feel that AI as a hiring tool has made even landing a job interview a nearly unattainable fantasy.

Take for example the story of Chad Markey, a 33-year-old graduate-to-be from an Ivy league medical school. A comprehensive article by Wired broke down the ways in which Markey has been screwed by AI screening software, which seems to have very nearly destroyed his chances at being accepted into a residency program.

Having applied to 82 such programs for the 2025-2026 cycle, Markey was shocked at the number of flat-out denials coming in. He had good grades from an Ivy league school, Wired noted, as well as at least 10 published research papers to his name, and effusive letters of recommendation from his professors.

But he also had three separate leaves of absence on his record, owing to debilitating flare-ups of an autoimmune disease known as ankylosing spondylitis. Though the leaves of absence were medically necessary — which Markey explained in a letter in his applications — they were technically categorized as “voluntary.” That’s a minor detail which, if misinterpreted by a sloppy AI system, could have devastating consequences for his applications.

“I crawled out of a f**king black hole,” he told Wired. “I could not walk for six months. I’ve come this far, and this is happening?”

Meanwhile, an AI screening tool called Cortex was taking hospitals by storm. Cortex basically chews up resident application documents and spits them out onto an easy-to-read dashboard, theoretically allowing hiring personnel a broad overview of hundreds of applicants from a wide variety of medical programs. As the software’s creator Thalamus told Wired, the tool is already being used by about 1,500 medical residency programs throughout the US.

As with all AI tools, Cortex has its fair share of issues. As one editorial published in the journal Laryngoscope documented, Cortex presents “persistent errors” which have the “potential to negatively impact residency applications and programs,” particularly the fact that it was known to show inaccurate letter grades for applicants, as Wired reported.

Suspecting Cortex may also be quashing his applications due to his medically necessary leaves of absence, Markey began a months-long quest to get to the bottom of the screening software. After numerous experiments and attempts at reverse-engineering Cortex, the Ivy league student found compelling evidence that the AI tool grades applications with voluntary leaves of absence significantly lower than ones with accurate descriptions of the medical circumstances.

Of the 82 residency programs Markey applied to, only five confirmed to Wired that they were not using Cortex. This doesn’t mean the rest of them were, and Thalamus denied that it algorithmically scored or ranked any applicants for the 2025-2026 residency cycle. But the smoking guns came when Markey began cold-emailing residency administrators, resulting in 10 excited offers from prestigious hospitals that the AI screening tool had failed to deliver (he’s currently set to start at Columbia University’s psychiatry program at New York Presbyterian Hospital in July.)

Markey’s odyssey underscores the horrifying consequences these tools can have at scale and the lack of transparency they engender. Had Markey been a desperate single mother applying to housekeeping jobs or an elderly worker laid-off a year before retirement, there’d be little chance of ever reverse engineering any hiring tools, let alone landing a job via cold email. For the worker, the result is a kind of black box reality where AI renders verdicts they may never understand, if they know about them at all.

More on AI and labor: You’ll Never Guess Trade Unions’ Position on AI Data Centers