
Meta wants candidates to use AI during job interviews. Yes, even during coding
Wired reports that Silicon Valley giants, including Meta, are actively encouraging their tech talent to use AI as part of their jobs and wish to hire employees who can write code with AI assistance. Consequently, Meta is developing a new type of coding interview in which candidates have access to an AI assistant.
In a statement on an internal message board, quoted by Wired, Meta said, "This is more representative of the developer environment that our future employees will work in, and also makes LLM-based cheating less effective."
Wired also noted that Meta's internal posts included calls for mock candidates, inviting them to sign up if they wished to experience a 'mock AI-enabled interview.'
What Does Mark Zuckerberg Feels About AI As Part Of Tech Jobs?
Regarding Meta's CEO Mark Zuckerberg's perspective on involving AI in coding processes, he has been actively pushing for its use. He has stated that AI could soon be capable of writing a significant amount of code, potentially even matching the output of a mid-level software engineer.
Furthermore, Mark Zuckerberg has said publicly that whilst he does not want to force engineers to use AI to get their work done, he wants a future where humans manage AI coding agents that perform the actual work. He predicts that, over time, much of the code in applications will be built by "AI engineers" rather than human ones. This shift, he says, will free people to be more creative and pursue more 'crazy things.'
Having said that, not all tech companies are open to AI being part of job interviews. In fact, Anthropic, the maker of Claude AI, has banned the use of AI during hiring.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

Mint
an hour ago
- Mint
OpenAI banned from using Claude AI just before GPT-5 launch: Here's why
Anthropic has revoked OpenAI's access to its AI models on Tuesday for allegedly violating the company's terms of service, according to a Wired report. The news of Anthropic cutting OpenAI's access to Claude comes at a time when the Sam Altman led company is rumored to be releasing its own GPT 5 model soon. Anthropic spokesperson Christopher Nulty, while confirming the development in a statement to Wired, said, 'Claude Code has become the go-to choice for coders everywhere, and so it was no surprise to learn OpenAI's own technical staff were also using our coding tools ahead of the launch of GPT 5.' 'Unfortunately, this is a direct violation of our terms of service.' he added. Meanwhile, Nulty stated that Anthropic will 'continue to ensure OpenAI has API access for the purposes of benchmarking and safety evaluations as is standard practice across the industry.' OpenAI was reportedly plugging Claude into its own internal tools using special developer access (APIs), instead of the chat interface, which allowed the ChatGPT maker to run tests to evaluate the rival AI models' capability on tasks like coding and creative writing. OpenAI was also able to check how Claude responded to safety related prompts in categories like CSAM, self harm and defamation. The results from these tests reportedly helped OpenAI compare the behavior of its own models under similar conditions and make adjustments as needed. Anthropic's commercial terms of service state that customers are not allowed to use its AI models to 'build a competing product or service, including to train competing AI models or resell the Service.' OpenAI's Chief Communications Officer Hannah Wong, in a statement to Wired, said, 'It's industry standard to evaluate other AI systems to benchmark progress and improve safety. While we respect Anthropic's decision to cut off our API access, it's disappointing considering our API remains available to them.' Notably, this isn't the first time that Anthropic has cut off a competitor's access to its AI model. Earlier in the year, the company had restricted AI coding startup Windsurf from having direct access to its models after reports started emerging that the company was being acquired by OpenAI. Anthropic's Chief Science Officer Jared Kaplan had then talked about revoking Windsurf's access to Claude, saying, 'I think it would be odd for us to be selling Claude to OpenAI.'


India Today
an hour ago
- India Today
Tim Cook rallies staff, says AI revolution bigger than internet and Apple will invest to grab it
Apple CEO Tim Cook has told employees that the company is going 'all in' on artificial intelligence, describing it as a technology revolution on par with, or even greater than, the internet and the smartphone era. According to Bloomberg, Cook delivered the message in a rare allhands meeting held in the company's oncampus auditorium, following the iPhone maker's latest earnings report. The address was aimed at energising Apple staff around AI and what Cook called the company's 'amazing' pipeline of future must do this. Apple will do this. This is sort of ours to grab,' Cook told staff. 'We will make the investment to do it,' he CEO compared the rise of AI to past technological shifts. 'We've rarely been first,' he said. 'There was a PC before the Mac; there was a smartphone before the iPhone; there were many tablets before the iPad; there was an MP3 player before iPod. This is how I feel about AI.' Cook said the company was 'open' to mergers and acquisitions to accelerate progress. Reports have suggested that Apple has even weighed up potential acquisitions, including AI search engine Perplexity and the French startup Mistral was months behind OpenAI, Alphabet and Microsoft when it announced its Apple Intelligence features last year – and even then, several of those tools failed to arrive in time for the iPhone 16 launch, leading to some awkward delays and Cook downplayed concerns about the slow rollout and said that perhaps not first, but Apple delivers the best. However, he urged employees to speed up how quickly AI is integrated into Apple's work. 'All of us are using AI in a significant way already, and we must use it as a company as well,' Cook said. 'To not do so would be to be left behind, and we can't do that.'AI strategy and Baltra chipsCook noted that 12,000 new hires had joined Apple over the past year, with 40 per cent of those roles focused on research and development. Much of this effort ties into Apple's AI strategy, particularly its inhouse chip development led by Johny has reported that Apple is building a new cloudcomputing chip, codenamed Baltra, specifically designed to power AI features. Alongside that, a dedicated AI server manufacturing facility is being established in retail expansion and new marketsThe meeting also touched on other priorities. Cook acknowledged that tariffs from the Trump administration remain a challenge, saying they will create a $1.1 billion headwind for the current quarter. Even so, Apple has remained optimistic about sales and highlighted that App Store revenue grew by a doubledigit percentage last quarter despite regulatory pressures in Europe and is also a focus area. Cook said Apple is 'opening outlets in India, the United Arab Emirates and China this year, and is preparing to add its first location in Saudi Arabia next year'.'We need to be in more countries, and you'll see us go into more emerging markets in particular,' he told employees. That, he stressed, 'doesn't mean Apple will ignore other places,' but a 'disproportionate amount of growth' will come from new also addressed the company's climate goals, Apple TV+ growth and the increased regulatory scrutiny of Big Tech. 'The reality is that Big Tech is under a lot of scrutiny around the world,' he said. 'We need to continue to push on the intention of the regulation and get them to offer that up, instead of these things that destroy the user experience and user privacy and security,' he added.- Ends


Time of India
an hour ago
- Time of India
Mark Zuckerberg meets 24-year-old AI researcher who rejected Meta's $125 million job offer, and then ...
Mark Zuckerberg and Meta's aggressive push to lead the AI race has reportedly led to a recruitment of a 24-year-old AI researcher . According to a report by The New York Times, Matt Deitke initially rejected Meta's $125 million offer, prompting Zuckerberg to meet him personally. After the meeting, Meta sealed the deal with a revised four-year compensation package reportedly worth up to $250 million in stock and cash. Citing two sources familiar with the talks, the New York Times report noted that Deitke preferred to continue with his newly founded startup, Vercept after $125 million was offered to him. Zuckerberg personally reached out to him for a meeting. After their conversation, Meta returned with a revised offer that doubled the original, including a potential $100 million to be paid in the first year alone. The compensation jump was so extraordinary that Deitke consulted with his peers, many of whom ultimately urged him to accept the deal. Who is Matt Deitke and why he is 'in demand' The report says that Deitke is a highly sought-after talent in the AI community. He previously led the development of Molmo – an AI chatbot that can process images, sounds and text – a multi-modal system that aligns with Meta's goals. His work on 3D datasets and embodied AI earned him an Outstanding Paper Award at NeurIPS 2022, a top honour given to only a dozen researchers out of more than 10,000 submissions. by Taboola by Taboola Sponsored Links Sponsored Links Promoted Links Promoted Links You May Like Hate Unclear Trade Tips? You're Not Alone Teji Mandi Buy Now Undo In November, Deitke co-founded his own startup, Vercept, which focuses on AI agents that can autonomously perform tasks using internet-based software. The startup, with about 10 employees, raised $16.5 million from investors, including former Google CEO Eric Schmidt . According to the report, Meta has reportedly spent over $1 billion to build an 'all-star roster' for its "superintelligence" research team. This includes luring away AI talent from rival firms like OpenAI, Anthropic, Apple and Google. Recently, Meta hired Ruoming Pang , the former head of Apple's AI models team, with a compensation package reportedly exceeding $200 million to join Meta's Superintelligence Labs team. AI Masterclass for Students. Upskill Young Ones Today!– Join Now