logo
When You Apply for a Job Now, You're Competing With Non-Human Entities

When You Apply for a Job Now, You're Competing With Non-Human Entities

Yahoo26-04-2025

As if the job market weren't already bad enough, applicants are now forced to compete with AI-generated employment seekers.
As CBS News reports, scam artists are using AI to cook up headshots and write fake résumés and sites to fit the specifics of a given job opening.
Sometimes, those AI scammers end up getting hired — and once they're there, they can steal trade secrets and sabotage a company's systems with malware.
A few months ago, Dawid Moczadlo, the co-founder of the cybersecurity firm Vidoc, posted a now-viral video on LinkedIn showing him interviewing a candidate who he realized was using some sort of AI filter to obscure their face.
Moczaldo asked the seemingly scamming candidate to put their hand in front of their face to see if it would "break" the deepfake filter. When the person refused, he ended the call immediately.
In an interview with CBS, the Vidoc cofounder said he felt a "little bit violated, because we are the security experts" — though ultimately, he was glad the scammer didn't get further.
According to researchers Moczadlo spoke to after the incident, the phony applicant appeared to act in a similar way to North Korean hacker networks that create fake identities to work remote jobs in the United States. Though the incident is still being investigated, the Vidoc cofounder believes it could have been worse.
"We are really lucky that we are security experts," Moczaldo said. "But for companies that have regular people like hiring managers or regular startup founders, it's really hard for them to spot something like this."
"Sometimes," he continued, "it takes a hacker to find a hacker."
Unfortunately, that was not the first time Vidoc had encountered an AI applicant. After it happened again, as seen in Moczadlo's LinkedIn video, the company decided to change its hiring practices and now flies top candidates out to San Francisco for in-person interviews at Vidoc's offices, complete with travel expenses covered and pay for the trial day of work.
While it's great to know that employers are trying to filter out these AI scammers, it's still pretty bad news for real people on the other end of hiring processes. Between companies laying off staff in hamfisted attempts to streamline their work with AI and generative phonies gumming up the application process, it appears that the rise of generative AI now has job applicants stuck between a rock and a hard place.
More on AI and work: Investor Creates AI Employee, Immediately Sexually Harasses It

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

PayPal's venture arm taps new leader
PayPal's venture arm taps new leader

Yahoo

time27 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

PayPal's venture arm taps new leader

This story was originally published on Payments Dive. To receive daily news and insights, subscribe to our free daily Payments Dive newsletter. PayPal's venture arm has appointed Ian Cox Moya, 42, as managing partner, the fintech giant said in an emailed statement Wednesday to Payments Dive. Moya's predecessor, James Loftus, exited PayPal to 'pursue another opportunity,' a PayPal spokesperson said in the statement. According to Loftus' LinkedIn page, he joined talent management tech company Velocity Global as chief financial officer this month, after being managing partner of PayPal's venture capital unit from 2022 until 2025. 'Ian has been an integral part of our team since he rejoined PayPal three years ago,' the spokesperson said. 'His deep fintech expertise in the U.S. and Latin America has been pivotal in shaping our global investment strategy, and he has supported many visionary founders across the fintech and e-commerce ecosystems.' Moya was part of PayPal's strategy development in Latin America from 2012 to 2015, and he rejoined the company in 2022 as a partner for the San Jose, California-based company's venture capital arm, according to his LinkedIn account. He formerly led card company Synchrony's venture arm from 2018 to 2021. To date, PayPal's venture arm has poured about $850 million into dozens of companies spanning the fintech, artificial intelligence and cryptocurrency industries, according to the company's website. Among those that have received venture capital are Acorns, FreshBooks, Ellevest, Plaid and Raise, per the company's website. Following Ian's return in 2022, PayPal's venture arm made considerable investments in Latin American fintech startups. In 2023, the company was one of multiple firms that invested $14 million into nocnoc, an e-commerce platform that connects global merchants with Latin America. The following year, PayPal's venture unit and other investors invested $15 million into Ume, a Brazilian payments company that serves small and mid-sized businesses. PayPal has extended its investment dollars beyond its payments purview in recent years. In 2023, the company was one of several investors that placed $30 million in Israeli data privacy management startup Mine. Last year, the venture arm and other investors invested $30 million in Rasa, a generative AI company. Recommended Reading Affirm targets offline growth

Trump's Lawyers Claim Kamala Harris' '60 Minutes' Interview Caused Him 'Mental Anguish'
Trump's Lawyers Claim Kamala Harris' '60 Minutes' Interview Caused Him 'Mental Anguish'

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

Trump's Lawyers Claim Kamala Harris' '60 Minutes' Interview Caused Him 'Mental Anguish'

President Donald Trump has apparently suffered from 'mental anguish' as a result of a CBS News '60 Minutes' interview with former Vice President Kamala Harris last year, his lawyers alleged in court documents. Trump's attorneys made the claim Wednesday in a motion to deny Paramount Global's request to dismiss Trump's lawsuit, which First Amendment experts have called 'frivolous and dangerous,' against CBS over the editing of the interview. (Paramount Global is the parent company of CBS.) In the October-filed lawsuit obtained by HuffPost, Trump accuses the network of 'partisan and unlawful acts of election and voter interference through malicious, deceptive, and substantial news distortion.' This, according to the suit, was exhibited through two slightly differing clips of Harris discussing Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu with journalist Bill Whitaker. According to court documents filed Wednesday, Trump's attorneys claim 'this led to widespread confusion and mental anguish of consumers, including plaintiffs, regarding a household name of the legacy media apparently deceptively distorting its broadcasts, and then resisting attempts to clear the public record.' The interview 'forced' Trump to 'redirect significant time, money and effort to correcting the public record,' the document said. The motion also called the president a 'content creator,' whose content creation 'was damaged by the attention diverted to Defendants' distorted programming.' The network maintains that the interview was 'not doctored or deceitful.' 'In reporting the news, journalists regularly edit interviews – for time, space or clarity. In making these edits, 60 Minutes is always guided by the truth and what we believe will be most informative to the viewing public – all while working within the constraints of broadcast television,' CBS said in a February statement. The Wall Street Journal reported Thursday that the president turned down a $15 million settlement offer, which falls short of his desired compensation: more than $25 million and a CBS News apology. The president has also threatened to file another lawsuit against the company over what he claims is biased reporting, according to the WSJ. Trump has repeatedly gone after '60 Minutes' and has so far unsuccessfully called on CBS to lose its broadcast license on multiple occasions. In one of his countless social media rants in April, he slammed the show after choosing to hate-watch it. 'They are not a 'News Show,' but a dishonest Political Operative simply disguised as 'News,' and must be responsible for what they have done, and are doing,' the president wrote at the time. 'They should lose their license!' At least two top executives, including CBS News CEO Wendy McMahon and '60 Minutes' executive producer Bill Owens, have stepped down as the network seeks to make a deal with Trump. SEC Dismisses Lawsuit Against Binance As Trump Continues To Cozy Up To Crypto Trump Turns Down $15 Million Offer To Settle '60 Minutes' Lawsuit: Report The Extremely Dumb Excuse That Republicans Are Using To Justify Trump's Corruption The Trump Administration Is Trapping Migrant Kids In Shelters

Indian couple's extravagant wedding parade shuts down Wall Street — meet the bride and groom
Indian couple's extravagant wedding parade shuts down Wall Street — meet the bride and groom

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

Indian couple's extravagant wedding parade shuts down Wall Street — meet the bride and groom

It was a marriage made in Manhattan — and it brought Wall Street to a full stop. An extravagant Indian wedding parade, or baraat, turned the Financial District into a full-blown block party on Saturday, halting traffic and causing jaws to drop faster than a stock market crash. Hundreds of people, decked in glittering sarees, sequinned lehengas and gold-embellished finery, gathered outside Cipriani Wall Street to watch the happy couple arrive and grooved to a pulsating blend of Bollywood beats and pop bangers spun by a live DJ. 'We shut down Wall Street for a 400-person Baraat,' DJ AJ @djmumbai wrote alongside a clip of the epic moment. 'Who would've ever thought?!' 'Who are the bride and the groom? Must be billionaires,' one person commented. Turns out, the mystery newlyweds weren't Bollywood royalty — but they might as well be. Thanks to a plethora of social media posts tagging them, the duo was identified as Varun Navani, CEO of enterprise AI platform Rolai, and Amanda Soll, a director of legal compliance and risk management, per their LinkedIn pages. Their identities were confirmed by their wedding page on The Knot, which contained the details of their four-day wedding celebration. The high-powered pair hail from Boston, Mass., but decided to tie the knot in the city that never sleeps. The bride and groom didn't just break the internet — they broke the bank. According to city records viewed by The Post, the couple filed 28 permits for their big day, likely shelling out between $25,000 and $66,000 per location to shut down the Financial District. The Mayor's Office classifies street events — which take over curbs, sidewalks and roads — by size and impact, with 'large' events requiring a full block closure and extensive setup, and 'extra-large' events demanding even more space, permits and NYPD coordination. The baraat — a time-honored tradition in Hindu and Muslim South Asian weddings — is essentially a pre-ceremony procession where the groom's family and friends dance their way to the venue, often with dhol drums, music and more flair than a Broadway finale. Traditionally, the groom arrives on horseback, following rituals like his sister feeding daal-channa (lentils) to the steed and sisters-in-law applying kaala teeka (a black dot) to the back of his neck to ward off the evil eye. According to their Knot page, the lovefest kicked off Friday, May 23, with breakfast and afternoon tea at the Conrad hotel, followed by a lively sangeet — a pre-wedding bash full of music, dancing and revelry — at The Glasshouse. Saturday brought more breakfast, brunch and tea at the Conrad before the main event: the baraat at 3:30 p.m., followed by a lavish reception at Cipriani Wall Street that kept guests partying from 5:30 p.m. to 2 a.m. For the baraat, Navani arrived in a traditional ivory long coat, or sherwani, and layered pearl necklaces and stunned onlookers, who captured the dazzling scene of hundreds dancing down the historic street. The groom was also seen riding in a white vehicle down the street at one point and clapped with a megawatt grin as his crew hoisted him into the air. Soll, the bride, stunned in a deep ruby lehenga by renowned Indian designer Sabyasachi Mukherjee, adorned with ornate gold embellishments and matching glimmering jewelry. Her brunette tresses swept into an elegant updo with soft face-framing tendrils. Her glam? A modern classic with kohl-rimmed, winged liner, glistening highlighter and rosy blush on her cheekbones and a minimal nude lip. Even the groomsmen brought the fashion heat in coordinated pink-and-white ethnic attire, setting a festive tone for the scene that had bystanders wondering if they'd stumbled onto a movie set. But wait — there's more. On Sunday, the pair hosted another round of breakfast and tea before exchanging vows again in an evening Jewish wedding at Cipriani and an after-party at Slate that lasted until 4 a.m. And on Monday, they wrapped it all up with one last post-wedding brunch and lunch send-off at the Conrad's West Ballroom before guests were bussed out of the Big Apple — likely in need of a vacation from the wedding. From boardrooms to baraats, these newlyweds made Wall Street dance to their own beat.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store