> Reports suggest that over 50% of candidates are now suspected of using AI tools off-camera to solve real-time coding challenges during remote interviews. Wait... isn't this one of the companies pushing the use of AI for just this type of programming work? 🤔 I remember 20 years ago, my CTO at the time having a real panic about interviews and "what if they just google all the answers?". The aim of an interview isn't to create some artificial, sterile room to stress test a candidate (though you'd think it was...), it's about seeing how they use the tools available, the tools they'll use on the job, respond to challenge and approach problem solving. All of this can be done without worrying about the impact of AI, because AI isn't your problem, your problem is how you structure your interviews.
Google is going back to in-person interviews for software engineering roles! Reports suggest that over 50% of candidates are now suspected of using AI tools off-camera to solve real-time coding challenges during remote interviews. Some Google employees have even called on leadership to ban remote interviews altogether, arguing that they no longer reflect a candidate’s true fundamentals. This shift highlights an interesting dilemma... AI is transforming how engineers work, but it’s also disrupting how we evaluate engineers. Balancing fairness, authenticity and progress will be key for every company hiring in the AI era. What do you think - should live coding interviews adapt to this new reality, or is going back to in-person the right call? P.S. Check out this video to see a mock in-person coding interview at Google: https://lnkd.in/emvweUJz
💯.. I always support open book exams as in real time you are supposed to deliver the solution no matter how haha ..
Product Designer (UI & UX) Utilities, Fintech, App, Web, Figma
1moSo true!