My brain: ‘Don’t say fucking your mom, don’t do it. DON’T. YOU. DARE. SAY. FUCKING. YOUR. MOM!!’
Recruiter: ‘You’re using chat gpt aren’t you?’
Me: ‘yep, that’s definitely it. Absolutely…’
What do the things I do in my personal time have to do with being selected for a job? Fuck these people, I’m sure the process before reaching these interviews is highly automated (with or without llms). If companies are going to use all kinds of ai bullshit (on top of the usual non-ai bullshit) workers ai-bullshiting back is only fair.
It’s one of the many questions meant to ensure you’re capable of basic human interaction and aware of basic social conventions. You aren’t rambling about your BDSM sex dungeon or how much you love setting Teslas on fire in a mock work setting, you have the tact to choose something work appropriate.
It’s also because you might be spending 40 fucking hours a week with the person interviewing you, and it can be nice for them to have some small chat topics going in. No workplace is 100% “keep your head down and just work”. Human connection is extraneous to the job at hand, but it sure can make those 40 hours far less of a death march every week.
And now it serves yet another minor purpose: it’s another flag that might point to the interviewer using ChatGPT to bullshit things.
It’s concerning to me that so many people can’t come up with even a few useful reasons for a bullshit interview question like that.
“chatgpt give me a list of hobbies that can be mentioned in a job interview.”
The issue is that the companies themselves heavily employ “AI” tools to find a candidate that is as standard and run off the mill as possible. Then the interviewer asks more questions that are mostly standardized and have a standard set of acceptable and a standard set of unacceptable answers.
The entire process is designed to be robotic and it favors people who automatize as much of it as possible.
Companies do want employees who are already robots. And like Capek’s original definition.
Look at how companies automate the work schedules based on efficiency above all else and it’s no surprise they want us to be replaced all together since even the drugs and propaganda doesn’t stop humans from being human.
It favors those who can give up all other aspects to be the best worker, to be a robot covered in skin. And we wonder why people feel so detached and don’t want kids. They programmed us poorly as humans.
[Copy paste from my other answer] It was a rhetorical question, sorry that wasn’t clear. I know that knowing details about my private life can be useful for an employer to estimate how exploitable I’m going to be. What it meant is more or less ‘Not their fucking business’, asking personal questions in an interview is a big red flag for me, how about ‘are you thinking on getting pregnant any time soon?’? I’m sure most companies would like to have that information too…
And now it serves yet another minor purpose: it’s another flag that might point to the interviewer using ChatGPT to bullshit things.
No, it only does for the unprepared: ‘Hey, chat gpt, give me a list of hobbies that would make a good impression in a job interview’, or just bullshit through it: ‘I volunteer, I play some [team sport], I like hiking, hitting the gym, reading, playing the guitar even though I’m not very good…’.
It must be great living with no anxiety or mental issues that would make such interactions not immediately comfortable for the interviewee… If you think they’re fantasizing about a bdsm sex dungeon role play instead… Well that tells me more about you than it does a potential hire.
It must be great living with no anxiety or mental issues that would make such interactions not immediately comfortable for the interviewee.
Maybe. I wouldn’t personally know.
Sorry, but I’m definitvely not the strawman normie talking down to the neurodivergent people that it reads like you hoped I was.
And how in the hell did you get idea “you think they’re fantasizing about a bdsm sex dungeon role play” when someone pauses in an interview out of what I said?
First off, I never used the words “role play”. Dohohoho.
It was an exaggeration for humor’s sake, and the scenario in my head was someone just immediately responding to the question with a boatload of details about their sex life.
Warhammer 40k can show attention to detail and strategy.
Working on cars can demonstrate methodical work ethic and problem solving.
Self hosting can show an enthusiasm for tech.
It literally doesn’t matter what you answer, just shows that you have a life outside of work and might be an enjoyable coworker.
It was a rhetorical question, sorry that wasn’t clear. I know that knowing details about my private life can be useful for an employer to estimate how exploitable I’m going to be. What it meant is more or less ‘Not their fucking business’, asking personal questions in an interview is a big red flag for me, how about ‘are you thinking on getting pregnant any time soon?’? I’m sure most companies would like to have that information too…
There certainly are different calibers of personal life questions that can be asked, but I’m pretty sure in the example above it is about freezing without an answer entirely. “I’m sorry, but I don’t feel comfortable answering questions not related to the position” would probably pass their litmus just as well as listing some hobbies.
Recruiter: ‘What are your hobbies?’
My brain: ‘Don’t say fucking your mom, don’t do it. DON’T. YOU. DARE. SAY. FUCKING. YOUR. MOM!!’
Recruiter: ‘You’re using chat gpt aren’t you?’
Me: ‘yep, that’s definitely it. Absolutely…’
What do the things I do in my personal time have to do with being selected for a job? Fuck these people, I’m sure the process before reaching these interviews is highly automated (with or without llms). If companies are going to use all kinds of ai bullshit (on top of the usual non-ai bullshit) workers ai-bullshiting back is only fair.
It’s one of the many questions meant to ensure you’re capable of basic human interaction and aware of basic social conventions. You aren’t rambling about your BDSM sex dungeon or how much you love setting Teslas on fire in a mock work setting, you have the tact to choose something work appropriate.
It’s also because you might be spending 40 fucking hours a week with the person interviewing you, and it can be nice for them to have some small chat topics going in. No workplace is 100% “keep your head down and just work”. Human connection is extraneous to the job at hand, but it sure can make those 40 hours far less of a death march every week.
And now it serves yet another minor purpose: it’s another flag that might point to the interviewer using ChatGPT to bullshit things.
It’s concerning to me that so many people can’t come up with even a few useful reasons for a bullshit interview question like that.
“chatgpt give me a list of hobbies that can be mentioned in a job interview.”
The issue is that the companies themselves heavily employ “AI” tools to find a candidate that is as standard and run off the mill as possible. Then the interviewer asks more questions that are mostly standardized and have a standard set of acceptable and a standard set of unacceptable answers.
The entire process is designed to be robotic and it favors people who automatize as much of it as possible.
Companies do want employees who are already robots. And like Capek’s original definition.
Look at how companies automate the work schedules based on efficiency above all else and it’s no surprise they want us to be replaced all together since even the drugs and propaganda doesn’t stop humans from being human.
It favors those who can give up all other aspects to be the best worker, to be a robot covered in skin. And we wonder why people feel so detached and don’t want kids. They programmed us poorly as humans.
[Copy paste from my other answer] It was a rhetorical question, sorry that wasn’t clear. I know that knowing details about my private life can be useful for an employer to estimate how exploitable I’m going to be. What it meant is more or less ‘Not their fucking business’, asking personal questions in an interview is a big red flag for me, how about ‘are you thinking on getting pregnant any time soon?’? I’m sure most companies would like to have that information too…
No, it only does for the unprepared: ‘Hey, chat gpt, give me a list of hobbies that would make a good impression in a job interview’, or just bullshit through it: ‘I volunteer, I play some [team sport], I like hiking, hitting the gym, reading, playing the guitar even though I’m not very good…’.
It must be great living with no anxiety or mental issues that would make such interactions not immediately comfortable for the interviewee… If you think they’re fantasizing about a bdsm sex dungeon role play instead… Well that tells me more about you than it does a potential hire.
Wouldn’t that also make you an unpleasant coworker on the actual job
Maybe. I wouldn’t personally know.
Sorry, but I’m definitvely not the strawman normie talking down to the neurodivergent people that it reads like you hoped I was.
And how in the hell did you get idea “you think they’re fantasizing about a bdsm sex dungeon role play” when someone pauses in an interview out of what I said?
First off, I never used the words “role play”. Dohohoho.It was an exaggeration for humor’s sake, and the scenario in my head was someone just immediately responding to the question with a boatload of details about their sex life.
Warhammer 40k can show attention to detail and strategy. Working on cars can demonstrate methodical work ethic and problem solving. Self hosting can show an enthusiasm for tech.
It literally doesn’t matter what you answer, just shows that you have a life outside of work and might be an enjoyable coworker.
It was a rhetorical question, sorry that wasn’t clear. I know that knowing details about my private life can be useful for an employer to estimate how exploitable I’m going to be. What it meant is more or less ‘Not their fucking business’, asking personal questions in an interview is a big red flag for me, how about ‘are you thinking on getting pregnant any time soon?’? I’m sure most companies would like to have that information too…
There certainly are different calibers of personal life questions that can be asked, but I’m pretty sure in the example above it is about freezing without an answer entirely. “I’m sorry, but I don’t feel comfortable answering questions not related to the position” would probably pass their litmus just as well as listing some hobbies.