AI HR Daily by OVI
The EU AI Act just pushed its employment AI compliance deadline from August 2026 to December 2027 — but that extension is less of a lifeline than it sounds. For the 78% of enterprises that haven't taken a single meaningful compliance step, 18 months is barely enough time to build what the law actually requires. What makes this especially alarming is the bias audit paradox. A 2026 Stanford study of 4.1 million applications revealed that AI screening tools can appear completely bias-free in aggregate — while quietly discriminating against Black and Asian applicants role by role. The culprit is the four-fifths rule, the industry-standard bias testing method most companies plan to use. When job roles are averaged together, discrimination in one position gets cancelled out by over-selection in another, producing a clean overall score that regulators won't accept. The EU AI Act demands ongoing, position-level bias monitoring — not annual aggregate snapshots. It also requires AI system inventories, Fundamental Rights Impact Assessments, six-month log retention, human oversight mechanisms, and worker notification, all before deploying high-risk AI in HR contexts. Most enterprises can't even name every AI tool their HR team is running. In this episode, we break down the two-layer crisis: why 78% of companies are behind, why the most common bias audit method is fundamentally flawed, and the four concrete steps HR and compliance teams need to take right now.
495 episodes
Comments
0Be the first to comment
Sign up now and become a member of the AI HR Daily by OVI community!