Amazon’s discriminatory hiring algorithm is not alone, Cathy O’Neill writes. Rather, many companies use algorithms for hiring and human resources tasks and intentionally seek to maintain plausible deniability about whether the algorithm perpetuates discrimination. For those who haven’t heard, Amazon recently pulled its hiring algorithm because the company learned that the algorithm was discriminated against women applicants — giving demerits for going to a women’s college, for instance — because the input data from Amazon reflected a gender bias in hiring and promotion. But O’Neill writes that the use of such an algorithm is the norm, and Amazon is the exception in that it chose to investigate algorithmic outcomes.
An Amazon employee spoke out in an op-ed against Amazon’s sale of facial recognition technology to police departments. The technology, known as Rekognition, has broad capacity to scan and store facial data points, and some Amazon employees fear that the sale of such technology to police departments, without strict limits on how the technology will be used, could facilitate mass surveillance. The piece is part of a trend, particularly in the technology industry, of employees speaking up about business decisions that impact public policy and politics.
As Marriott workers continue their strike in several cities, union leaders and activists criticized the musical artist Common for crossing the picket line at the Ritz-Carlton in Boston. Common, who has been active in social movements, including Black Lives Matter, did not respond to comment. The strike is now in its third week.
Daily News & Commentary
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May 22
BLS releases statistics on foreign-born workers; courts vacate EEOC protections; SCOTUS considers takings case.
May 21
Supreme Court grants the Trump Administration the ability to end Temporary Protected Status for Venezuelan immigrants; a federal judge permits airline customer service agents to pursue litigation rather than arbitration in a wage dispute; and NLRB prosecutors limit when they seek consequential remedies for unfair labor practices.
May 19
Schedule F comment period ends this week; Wilcox's reinstatement case is back before D.C. Circuit; NLRB removal protection case runs into jurisdictional problem; NJ locomotive strike ends in success.
May 18
In today’s news and commentary, the DC Circuit lifts a preliminary injunction on Trump’s collective bargaining ban for federal workers; HHS, DOL and Treasury pause a 2024 mental health parity regulation; and NJ Transit workers continue into the third day of a historic strike. In a 2-1 decision issued on Friday, the D.C. Circuit overturned […]
May 16
Supreme Court hears a case about universal injunctions; Champion of workers' rights announces run for Colorado Attorney General; Sesame Street is officially union!
May 15
Unions in Colorado urge Governor Polis to sign Senate Bill 5; more than 1200 Starbucks workers go on strike; and IATSE calls on President Trump to reinstate Shira Perlmutter.