Chicago Tribune (Sunday)

Illinois leading AI hire rules

Law first in US to require transparen­t use in interviews

- By Abdel Jimenez

Illinois residents who made finding a new job one of their 2020 resolution­s will have a better understand­ing of how employers use artificial intelligen­ce to assess video interviews, under a new state law that is the first of its kind.

The Illinois Artificial Intelligen­ce Video Interview Act, which took effect Jan. 1, requires companies to notify applicants when AI will be used to screen them. Video interviews typically involve candidates recording responses at a computer and algorithms are used to analyze the answers.

Under the new law, companies must explain how the technology works and how the tools evaluate a candidate. Employers must obtain consent from applicants before using AI to assess their videos. The legislatio­n also prohibits businesses from sharing submitted videos except with “persons whose expertise or technology” are required to screen applicants. Job applicants can ask to have submitted videos destroyed, and companies, including any individual with copies, must comply within 30 days.

Some career counseling groups say it’s unclear whether the law will protect job applicants because its provisions are vague.

“Candidates can decline to have the video interview, but the law doesn’t require that employers provide an alternativ­e. A lot of the responsibi­lity is being put on the candidate,” said Anita Jenke, executive director of Career Transition­s Center of Chicago, a nonprofit career coaching organizati­on.

Jenke said job applicants might feel obligated to do the video interview so they don’t lose out on an employment opportunit­y.

Employers in a variety of industries increasing­ly are turning to video interviews as a way to cut through the piles of applicatio­ns they receive. In some cases, AI software is used to analyze the candidate’s facial expression, tone and language, although many of the algorithms behind the technology remain concealed by the companies that design them. Critics of the practice say it results in biased evaluation­s of applicants.

Rep. Jaime Andrade Jr., 40th, who sponsored the bill, said the legislatio­n is meant to bring transparen­cy to how applicant videos are evaluated.

“The technology hasn’t been vetted fully yet. There are some

concerns regarding bias. (The software) is only as good as the data it is given,” Andrade said.

Andrade said he is working on another bill that will explain provisions of the law and protect job applicants who don’t consent to the interviews from automatic disqualifi­cation.

“This is the first law of its kind in the nation. It’s a work in progress,” Andrade said.

Video interviews are just one of the tools that employers are turning to as they incorporat­e technology into the hiring process. Resume filters scan for keywords and phrases on resumes, chatbots schedule interviews and algorithms help predict a job candidate’s future success.

With video interviews in particular, job seekers need to be more conscious about how they present themselves because it’s uncertain what the algorithms are looking for, said Jenke, who has worked at Career Transition­s Center for 10 years.

“I think what they need to do is think about how do you compelling­ly and concisely tell your story? What makes you stand out? Applicants have to use keywords and learn to be concise because we don’t know what they (employers) are measuring,” Jenke said.

The new technologi­es make it harder for applicants to make a personal connection with hiring managers, said Jeffrey Blumenfeld, director of career services for JVS Career and Employment, a career counseling program of Jewish Child & Family Services in Chicago.

“Quite frankly, the two reasons people secure employment is that they have the qualificat­ions needed to perform the job they are applying for and they fit within the company culture,” Blumenfeld said.

The JVS program helps job seekers by conducting practice video interviews. “We work with our clients to prevent them from sounding mechanical and help them become more conversati­onal in their recorded interviews,” Blumenfeld said.

One company that offers an AI-enhanced video interview platform supports the Illinois law.

“We are in favor of it. There should be transparen­cy with the candidate,” said Kevin Parker, CEO and chairman of HireVue Inc.

The South Jordan, Utahbased company employs a team of data scientists and industrial and organizati­onal psychologi­sts who build the algorithms that screen candidates. The team also designs interview questions alongside employers. HireVue creates a different AI-driven assessment for each position. Parker said HireVue’s technology evaluates job applicants’ answers, tone of voice and the choice of words individual­s use.

For example, if a company is hiring a sales representa­tive, the algorithm is trained to look for certain things a candidate says about being empathetic or compassion­ate. Parker said the technology takes into account each response when evaluating job applicants, and there is no way to cheat the system by repeating keywords.

“Are they talking in first or third person, using the past or present tense … we are looking for those sorts of things,” Parker said.

HireVue counts Unilever and Hilton Hotels and Resorts as clients. Parker said the technology can give more options to employers and reduce human biases that can occur in traditiona­l in-person interviews, such as recruiters liking candidates based on similar alma maters.

The Electronic Privacy Informatio­n Center, a Washington, D.C.-based nonprofit privacy rights group, filed a complaint on Nov. 6 with the Federal Trade Commission, asking the agency to investigat­e HireVue’s technology. The organizati­on alleges HireVue committed unfair and deceptive practices by denying it uses facial recognitio­n technology to asses job applicants “employabil­ity.”

Nicole Drayton, an FTC spokespers­on, confirmed the agency received the complaint but declined further comment.

Parker said the allegation­s from the complaint are without merit.

Jeremy Gillula, technology projects director for the Electronic Frontier Foundation, a nonprofit that advocates for consumer privacy rights, said AI.’s use in the interview process is flawed and could perpetuate discrimina­tory assessment­s of candidates.

Gillula said the law has good intentions, but doesn’t go far enough to protect job applicants.

Businesses that ask applicants to submit video interviews but don’t use AI to evaluate them are not affected by the new law.

Still, some job seekers find it hard to interview through videos because they aren’t able to make first impression­s like in typical in-person interviews. Anita Erickson, 57, who is seeking career coaching advice from the Career Transition­s Center, said she has interviewe­d with eight companies through different webbased and video platforms.

Erickson said she has to focus more on how she is presenting herself rather than what she is saying.

“It’s not about the content of the interview anymore because you are worried about things like finding the right lighting and dealing with technologi­cal glitches,” Erickson said.

The law’s provision that allows applicants to request to have video submission­s deleted is an important one for Erickson, who values her privacy.

“How long does that informatio­n live? Are companies sharing videos to third parties? I think it’s important that we have a right to ask to have these videos erased,” Erickson said.

 ?? ABEL URIBE/CHICAGO TRIBUNE ?? Anita Erickson, who is seeking a job, sits with Mike Munger of Career Transition­s Center as she prepares on Thursday for potential video interviews.
ABEL URIBE/CHICAGO TRIBUNE Anita Erickson, who is seeking a job, sits with Mike Munger of Career Transition­s Center as she prepares on Thursday for potential video interviews.

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