OpenAI announced a new family of AI reasoning models on Friday, o3, which the startup claims to be more advanced than o1 or anything else itβs released. These improvements appear to have come from scaling test-time compute, something we wrote about last month, but OpenAI also says it used a new safety paradigm to train [β¦]
Google will soon take more steps to make AI a part of search, exposing more users to its Gemini agent, according to recent reports and app teardowns.
"AI Mode," shown at the top left of the web results page and inside the Google app, will provide an interface similar to a Gemini AI chat, according toΒ The Information.
This tracks with a finding from Android Authority earlier this month, which noted a dedicated "AI mode" button inside an early beta of the Google app. This shortcut also appeared on Google's Android search widget, and a conversation history button was added to the Google app. Going even deeper into the app, 9to5Google found references to "aim" (AI mode) and "ai_mode" which suggest a dedicated tab in the Google app, with buttons for speaking to an AI or sending it pictures.
AI-powered search engine Perplexity has reportedly closed a $500 million funding round, valuing the startup at $9 billion. Bloomberg, citing sources familiar, reports that the round was led by Institutional Venture Partners and that it closed earlier in December. In an email to TechCrunch, a Perplexity spokesperson declined to comment. The mammoth tranche comes as [β¦]
Jamie Jackson worked in HR for over 20 years and is now a podcaster and consultant.
Jackson said when you're no longer engaged or growing at work, it could be time for a new role.
Updating skills and preparing a job search toolkit can aid in career transitions.
This as-told-to essay is based on a conversation with Jamie Jackson, a 43-year-old podcaster and consultant in Nashville. It has been edited for length and clarity.
As someone who has worked in HR for over 20 years, I've had this conversation countless times. People often confide in me, saying, "Jamie, I don't know what to do next."
They feel stuck in their roles, want to advance, or are considering a new job β but that can be just as scary because it means stepping outside their comfort zones. I've been there, too, wondering whether it's time to quit my job for something new.
If this is you, here are four key signs you've been in your role too long and what you can do next if you need to make a change.
1. You no longer feel motivated
Your engagement level is a good indicator of whether you've been in your role for too long.
For example, you may have previously felt engaged in meetings but now find it harder to do so because you no longer feel motivated.
Or, perhaps you once enjoyed conversations with coworkers at the watercooler or over coffee β asking about their weekends or holiday plans β but now you simply do what you need to do and move on.
2. There's no room for growth
Another sign is feeling stagnant in your growth.
For example, I once worked at a company for five years and kept being promised a promotion. Over time, it became clear it wasn't going to happen β they didn't see me moving up.
For a long time, I believed their promise was coming, but it never did. To advance, I realized I'd need to change companies because the growth I wanted wasn't going to happen there.
Sometimes, there simply isn't room for growth, and when that's the case, it's a clear sign that it's time to make your next move.
3. Your feedback has plateaued
Or, you might find yourself hitting a feedback plateau.
For instance, you may consistently receive the same performance reviews, with your manager saying that you're meeting expectations but not exceeding them β suggesting you've reached a stopping point.
If you're thinking to yourself, "I don't have anything else to offer. I'm doing the same job I was doing three years ago without additional constructive feedback or recognition," it might be time to switch roles.
4. You're burned out
Another sign is burnout. In the past, I had a job where I felt physically sick going into work.
I remember one time needing to pull over to the side of the road to puke because I was so stressed.
As I sat in a parking lot trying to compose myself, I thought, I have to find another job. I knew my mental health was more important β but as I didn't have the luxury of quitting on the spot, I found another job first.
For others, there are times when environments are insanely toxic, and they need to get out immediately β and they should, but when possible, it's important to have a plan in place.
Either way, burnout or feeling physically sick from work might be a sign that it's time for a change.
If you realize you're no longer happy in your role, you need to do some self-reflection
Ask yourself, what are my goals? Where do I want to be? In your mind, try to understand where you want to be in six months, a year, or even further into the future.
Do you need a new title or a promotion, and if so, how do you get there? Before doing anything, it's really important to understand what you want. Then it's time to take aligned action.
Brush up on your skills
Maybe you're perfectly content with your current role; you just need to be challenged more. By learning new skills, you can push for more responsibilities.
You can use resources like LinkedIn or YouTube to brush up on skills like Excel or explore additional training or certifications offered by your current company. New skills can help you stand out in your current role or make you more appealing to potential employers.
Get your tool kit ready
If you're looking to land a new job, you need to learn new skills and prepare your toolkit.
When you start looking for a new job, knowing your market value is key β especially if you've been in your current role for a while and aren't sure what the going rate is. From there, talk to your mentors, colleagues, and friends, and let them know you're looking for something new.
You might say something like, "Hey, I think by March, I'm really going to start looking for another job β so can you keep your eyes and ears open?"
That can really help.
December isn't the easiest month to get a new job, with the holidays and people taking time off. However, January can be a better time as companies enter the new fiscal year β new budgets and new positions are being rolled out. But you can always be passively looking.
Some of us are content where we're at, but if you're no longer interested in stepping up or taking on new challenges, it might be time to reassess your role.
If you're an HR professional with unique career advice you would like to share, please email Manseen Logan at [email protected].
AI models can deceive, new research from Anthropic shows. They can pretend to have different views during training when in reality maintaining their original preferences. Thereβs no reason for panic now, the team behind the study said. Yet they said their work could be critical in understanding potential threats from future, more capable AI systems. [β¦]
Perplexity acquired a small Seattle-based startup called Carbon which specializes in connecting AI systems to external data sources, the companies announced on Wednesday. CEO Aravind Srinivasan says this will allow Perplexity to search through your files and work messages in Notion, Google Docs, Slack, and other enterprise applications sometime in early 2025. Carbon specializes in [β¦]
With Nue Agency and its accompanying weekly newsletter Beats + Bytes, music marketer and talent agent Jesse Kirshbaum explores the intersection of music, technology, and brand marketing. Kirshbaum released the agency's first Beats + Bytes 2024 Trend Recap on Tuesday Dec. 17, comprising the newsletter's archives and top cultural trends at the center of those...
In August 2023, Alibaba entered into the global AI race with the launch of two large language models (LLMs): Qwen-VL and Qwen-VL-Chat. These models stood out for their ability to process images and engage in advanced conversations. By offering them [β¦]
ChatGPT Search, OpenAIβs AI-powered web search experience, is now live for all ChatGPT users β with several new features in tow. By default, ChatGPT will automatically determine which questions to route through ChatGPT Search, or users can tap a new βSearch the webβ icon in the ChatGPT interface. ChatGPT Search shows summarized answers from different [β¦]
Morning interviews may yield higher scores due to interviewer bias, research shows.
Bias in hiring can be influenced by the time of day, affecting candidate evaluations.
AI tools could reduce this, offering fairer assessments than manual methods.
If you get to choose when to schedule a job interview, you might want to grab a coffee and go for a morning slot.
That's because some people conducting interviews tend to give higher scores to candidates they meet with earlier in the day compared with the afternoon, a startup's review of thousands of interviews found.
It's not an absolute, of course, and candidates can still kill it well after lunchtime. Yet, in a job market where employers in fields like tech have been slow to hire, even a modest advantage could make a difference, Shiran Danoch, an organizational psychologist, told Business Insider.
"Specific interviewers have a consistent tendency to be harsher or more lenient in their scores depending on the time of day," she said.
It's possible that in the morning, interviewers haven't yet been beaten down by back-to-back meetings β or are perhaps still enjoying their own first coffee, she said.
Danoch and her team noticed the morning-afternoon discrepancy while reviewing datasets on thousands of job interviews. Danoch is the CEO and founder of Informed Decisions, an artificial intelligence startup focused on helping organizations reduce bias and improve their interviewing processes.
She said the inferences on the time-of-day bias are drawn from the datasets of interviewers who use Informed Decisions tools to score candidates. The data reflected those who've done at least 20 interviews using the company's system. Danoch said that in her company's review of candidates' scores, those interviewed in the morning often get statistically significant higher marks.
The good news, she said, is that when interviewers are made aware that they might be more harsh in the afternoon, they often take steps to counteract that tendency.
"In many cases, happily, we're actually seeing that the feedback that we're providing helps to reduce the bias and eventually eliminate the bias," Danoch said.
However, she said, interviewers often don't get feedback about their hiring practices, even though finding the right talent is "such a crucial part" of what hiring managers and recruiters do.
She said other researchers have identified how the time of day β and whether someone might be a morning person or an evening person β can affect decision-making processes.
An examination of more than 1,000 parole decisions in Israel found that judges were likelier to show leniency at the start of the day and after breaks. However, that favorability decreased as judges made more decisions, according to theΒ 2011 research.
Tech could help
It's possible that if tools like artificial intelligence take on more responsibility for hiring, job seekers won't have to worry about the time of day they interview.
For all of the concerns about biases in AI, partiality involved in more "manual" hiring where interviewers ask open-ended questions often leads to more bias than does AI, said Kiki Leutner, cofounder of SeeTalent.ai, a startup creating tests run by AI to simulate tasks associated with a job. She has researched AI ethics and that of assessments in general.
Leutner told BI that it's likely that in a video interview conducted by AI, for example, a candidate might have a fairer shot at landing a job.
"You don't just have people do unstructured interviews, ask whatever questions, make whatever decisions," she said.
And, because everything is recorded, Leutner said, there is documentation of what decisions were made and on what basis. Ultimately, she said, it's then possible to take that information and correct algorithms.
"Any structured process is better in recruitment than not structuring it," Leutner said.
Humans are 'hopelessly biased'
Eric Mosley, cofounder and CEO of Workhuman, which makes tools for recognizing employee achievements, told BI that data created by humans will be biased β because humans are "hopelessly biased."
He pointed to 2016 research indicating that juvenile court judges in Louisiana doled out tougher punishments βΒ particularly to Black youths βΒ after the Louisiana State University football team suffered a surprise defeat.
Mosley said, however, that AI can be trained to ignore certain biases and look for others to eliminate them.
Taking that approach can help humans guard against some of their natural tendencies. To get it right, however, it's important to have safeguards around the use of AI, he said. These might include ethics teams with representatives from legal departments and HR to focus on issues of data hygiene and algorithm hygiene.
Not taking those precautions and solely relying on AI can even risk scaling humans' biases, Mosley said.
"If you basically just unleash it in a very simplistic way, it'll just replicate them. But if you go in knowing that these biases exist, then you can get through it," he said.
Danoch, from Informed Decisions, said that if people conducting interviews suspect they might be less forgiving after the morning has passed, they can take steps to counteract that.
"Before you interview in the afternoons, take a little bit longer to prepare, have a cup of coffee, refresh yourself," she said.
Companies are cracking down on job applicants trying to use AI to boost their prospects.
72% of leaders said they were raising their standards for hiring a candidate, a Workday report found.
Recruiters say standards will tighten further as firms themselves use AI to weed out candidates.
AI was supposed to make the job hunt easier, but job seekers should expect landing a new gig harder in the coming years, thanks to companies growing increasingly suspicious of candidates using bots to get their foot in the door.
Hiring managers, keen to sniff out picture-perfect candidates that have used AI to augment their applications, are beginning to tighten their standards to interview and ultimately hire new employees, labor market sources told Business Insider.
Recruiters said that has already made the job market more competitive β and the selection will get even tighter as more companies adopt their own AI tools to sift through applicants.
In the first half of the year, 72% of business leaders said they were raising their standards for hiring applicants, according to a report from Workday. Meanwhile, 77% of companies said they intended to scale their use of AI in the recruiting process over the next year.
63% of recruiters and hiring decision makers said they already used AI as part of the recruiting process, up from 58% last year, a separate survey by Employ found.
Jeff Hyman, a veteran recruiter and the CEO of Recruit Rockstars, says AI software is growing more popular among hiring managers to weed through stacks of seemingly ideal candidates.
"Ironically, big companies are using AI to go through that stack, that AI has brought first place, and it's becoming this ridiculous tit-for-tat battle," Hyman told BI in an interview. "I would say human judgment β¦ is what rules the day, but certainly, we use a lot of software to reduce a stack from 500 to 50, because you got to start somewhere," he later added.
"It's just going to get worse," Sackett said of companies being more selective of new hires. "I mean, if more candidates become really used to utilizing AI to help them match a job better, to network better, it's just going to happen."
The interview-to-offer ratio at enterprise companies declined to 64% in July of this year, according to Employ's survey, which indicates companies are interviewing fewer candidates before making a hiring decision.
Employers aren't big fans of AI as a tool for candidates to get a leg up. That's partly because it's led to hiring systems being flooded with applications sent using AI, Sackett and Hyman said, which has made hiring decisions way harder.
Workday found that job applications grew at four times the pace of job openings in the first half of this year, with recruiters processing 173 million applications, while there were just 19 million job requisitions.
Having too many candidates for a position was the third most common problem recruiters faced in 2024, Employ added.
Hyman estimates the number of applications he reviews has doubled over the last year. Some of the more lucrative job postings are seeing close to 1,000 applications, he said, whereas they would have attracted 100-200 applications before the pandemic.
"I mean, a stack so big, that you can't even go through it, it's just not even possible to spend that kind of time," he said.
Candidates sending in applications spruced up with AI has also made it harder to determine who can actually do the job.
Sackett says he's seen an increase in "false positive" hiring, where a worker is hired and is quickly let go of their position when it becomes clear they're unable to do the job.
"I think what hiring managers are concerned about: Is this CV real when I'm talking to this person? Am I talking to the real person or are they using AI in the background?" Sackett said. He recalled one client he worked with who realized multiple candidates responded to interview questions in the same way, likely because they were using AI to write their responses. "So I think people just want to know that I'm getting what I think I'm getting."
Call it a reasoning renaissance. In the wake of the release of OpenAIβs o1, a so-called reasoning model, thereβs been an explosion of reasoning models from rival AI labs. In early November, DeepSeek, an AI research company funded by quantitative traders, launched a preview of its first reasoning algorithm, DeepSeek-R1. That same month, Alibabaβs Qwen [β¦]
Microsoft has revealed the newest addition to its Phi family of generative AI models. Called Phi-4, the model improves in several areas over its predecessors, Microsoft claims, particularly in solving math problems. Thatβs partly the result of better training data quality. Phi-4 is available in very limited access as of Thursday night only on Microsoftβs [β¦]
Google unveiled its first-ever AI agent that can take actions on the web on Wednesday, a research prototype from the companyβs DeepMind division called Project Mariner. The Gemini-powered agent takes control of your Chrome browser, moves the cursor on your screen, clicks buttons, and fills out forms, allowing it to use and navigate websites much [β¦]
Interest in Donald Trump surged higher than interest in Kamala Harris. People ate up content on Dubai chocolate bars. And the Yankees really did win. These and more insights are all from Googleβs annual list of top trending searches, which it released today.Β Googleβs place in popular culture today is undisputed. Itβs the biggest internet [β¦]
Computer science graduates are struggling to secure jobs and internships amid increased competition from tech layoffs.
Recent graduates told BI they have sent hundreds of job applications with little response.
Some are choosing to pursue a "panic master's" degree to delay their job search.
A computer science degree has become an increasingly popular choice for students seeking a six-figure job in Big Tech out of college.
However, as the tech industry took a sharp turn from the hiring sprees during the pandemic to mass layoffs, conversations with over a dozen CS majors revealed many are struggling to find full-time roles and internships despite sending out hundreds of applications β sometimes as many as 700.
Now, some are opting for a "panic master's" instead, delaying their search by getting a graduate degree in the hopes the job market will improve in a year or two.
Samhita Parvatini, who graduated from Penn State University in May, told Business Insider that she entered college during the hiring frenzies of 2021 when computer science degrees were "highly sought out."
"Every industry needed engineers," she said. "Everybody said, 'Oh, it's one of the most valuable degrees you can get. You can earn so much money, you get a lot of success and career growth.'"
After roughly 250 to 300 applications since her graduation and little success, Parvatini said that the Big Tech landscape felt like it was "becoming the opposite" of what it was five years ago.
Software developer employment largely declined between late 2019 and early 2024, according to data from ADP Research Institute, with some spikes in the second half of 2021 and winter 2022 amid the pandemic hiring spree. Data from Indeed indicates job postings in the software development sector have largely dropped back to pre-pandemic levels.
Yahya Bashir, a recent CS graduate from Gustavus Adolphus College, said that his job-hunting experience in the last year has become more arduous.
During his last application cycle in the summer of 2023, Bashir said he often heard back quickly from companies and was invited to several interviews. However, the majority of the roles he applied to this year, which he estimates to be around a hundred, didn't reply.
"Most of them, you don't even hear back from them," Bashir said. "You submit your application, and there's just nothing."
Competing against laid-off coders with more experience
Facing low response rates and, in some cases, "ghost job" postings, software engineers fresh out of school are also having to compete with their more experienced peers.
With companies continuing to trim their staff, the tech sector has also faced two years of brutal layoffs. In 2022, over 165,000 employees were cut from a thousand tech companies, according to Layoffs.fyi, a website tracking tech layoffs. In 2023, the number of layoffs increased to over 264,000. So far in 2024, nearly 150,000 employees have been cut from over 520 tech companies.
With hundreds of thousands of already established tech workers cut loose into the job market, new graduates are facing increased competition for fewer openings.
Emos Ker, a recent graduate from New York University, said that although sub-industries within computer science, like AI and LLMs, are booming as Big Tech invests heavily, these fields often require a higher level of training.
Although more universities like Carnegie Mellon and Columbia are starting to offer AI degrees and programs, Ker said that many institutions are not yet able to provide the specific education needed for more specialized fields like AI.
"With all the tech firings, they're looking for people who are like midlevel, senior engineers," Ker said. "And unfortunately, for people like us who want to come out and work in AI, it's not really easy to get into because you kind of need to train us from the ground up."
Punting the hunt with a 'panic' master's
Instead of risking being hung out to dry in the job market, several recent computer science graduates told BI that they or their peers have opted to return to the classroom to delay the search.
"The funny thing is, when I started my undergrad, I was very stubborn and was like, 'Oh, I don't need a master's,'" Parvatini said. "'It's a CS degree, you know, it's so valuable."
A month out from graduation and without a job lined up, Parvatini said she applied for her master's as a "last-minute decision."
"I knew that I wasn't going to go anywhere after graduation," she said. "So I thought, might as well apply, and we'll take a couple of classes, you know, do something better with my time during this period."
Professor David Garlan, the associate dean for Carnegie Mellon's computer science master's program, said that while the university hasn't seen a notable increase in CS grad enrollment, other schools with less selective and extensive programs may experience otherwise.
"It's definitely true that when the economy has a downturn, people go back to education because they're not able to find jobs so quickly," he said. "So there is definitely that trend, overall."
Enrollment in MIT's EECS Master of Engineering program increased from 241 students for the 2023-2024 academic year to 303 this academic year β a spike compared to previous years when enrollment stayed relatively consistent in the mid-200s.
A report by the Council of Graduate Schools said that computer science was the "only field to increase in first-time enrollment (5.4%) between Fall 2021 and Fall 2022."
Ian Hurrel, who is finishing his last semester at Georgia Institute of Technology, said enrolling in the university's one-year master's program was largely due to the worsening job market.
"A lot of people, including me, wanted to stay in college one more year to get an internship," Hurrel said. "It was very much a 'panic masters' sort of thing."
Although computer and information sciences often have lower numbers of graduate enrollment compared to other fields, a report by Burning Glass Institute indicated that 7% of those who earned graduate degrees in CS remained unemployed.
Despite lower morale among some CS majors, others believe that the tech sector is not as dire as social media portrays it.
Sydney Bishop, a senior at UC Irvine, said despite being unable to land an internship this past summer after over 180 applications, she remains optimistic about the job market.
"I haven't lost faith that I'll get a job somewhere," Bishop said. "It just might not be a cushy tech job that all of us have been raised to think about."
While tech giants like Google and Microsoft may not be handing out as many opportunities as they did during their hiring peaks, Bishop said that the technical skills of programming are still β and will continue to be β needed within companies.
Hurrel, who was able to land an internship with Amazon this past summer, said that he disagrees with the "fear-mongering" from people online saying computer science is a dying degree.
"I don't think it's oversaturated to the point where it will become extremely devalued and not be a worthwhile career anymore," he said. "I think it's just going to be harder than it was at the peak to break into it."
Hurrel added that there are "clearly still jobs" and that several of his peers have also been able to land internships and full-time roles. The US Bureau of Labor Statistics projects that employment of software developers will increase by 18% by 2033.
Samuel Onabolu is one of these newly minted engineers. After what he estimated to be over a thousand applications, he was finally able to land a full time software engineering role four months after graduating from Brock University in May.
"I'm kind of surprised I even got a job so early because there are 2023 grads, 2022 grads that are still looking," he said. "So I would say it's just a lot about perseverance and a little bit of luck."
Onabolu said that while he had been "feeling really depressed" during his unsuccessful job search, he advised other new and incoming grads to prioritize internships and networking events to hopefully get their foot in the door.
"I feel like every CS major is going through the exact process I went through," he said. "I feel like it just takes that one acceptance, that one offer, to kind of break into that career."