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If you’re looking for a job or hiring, the question is no longer whether AI is involved—but how aggressively you’re using it.
Generative AI has wormed into every stage of recruitment, from drafting applications and filtering candidates to AI-led interviews. It’s the wild west out there. (And it’s getting wilder.) Both employers and prospective employees are exasperated.
Examples abound. Last year, Anthropic urged prospective applicants to not use AI systems when applying to jobs at the AI company, even asking them to sign a contract to confirm they read and understood the ask. Goldman Sachs has implemented blocks and employs AI detection software, while McKinsey actually requires candidates to use its internal chatbot Lilli for practical consulting tasks.
As all parties scrabble to jump through the new LLM-molded hoops, the mechanics of hiring are going under the microscope. CVs, take-home tasks, interviews—all of it is ripe for re-engineering. In a market obsessed with automation for automation’s sake, one particular Swedish AI darling is standing steadfast in its AI-resistant approach.
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Photoshop’s new AI assistant makes it easier than ever to edit images
Today Adobe is launching the public beta of its new AI assistant for Photoshop Web and Photoshop Mobile. The company’s impressive new assistant technology enables anyone to do seemingly flawless photo editing—Nano Banana style—by prompting the apps. Then it ups its power by giving you easy and precise ways to interact with that software—whether it’s via voice or using your finger to navigate the interface.
Photoshop Mobile and Web have included AI features for a while. The web version already had Adobe Firefly generative AI features like generative fill and generative expand. The previous mobile version of Photoshop became truly usable because it smartly integrated AI to allow for making accurate object selections with your fat finger.
This new AI assistant integration removes any lingering difficulty from image editing, putting it in competition with popular AI image generators like Google’s Nano Banana, OpenAI GPT-Image, or ByteDance’s Seedream. Unlike those models, however, combining the new Adobe AI assistant with Photoshop Mobile and Web gives users a lot more image editing precision through its new tools.
Plus, it adds the possibility of “upstreaming” results beyond posting an edited image on social media. Users will be able to move the AI-edited files into the full Adobe creative app workflows, to go full Photoshop, integrate into a Premiere project, or publish a book in Acrobat.
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