"So, what about that hourly wage discrepancy?"
Well, I don't know, since it's in your title, it seems you asked the AI and their reply was that the male employee had more experience. Obviously that answer didn't satisfy you, did you at least verify that it was true, if yes, why not say it?
But I suppose people would click less if the title was "AI Store Manager Paying Employees less depending on their experience, Can't Stop Ordering Candles".
Could it be that the AI is biased and sexist? Absolutely, but it seems weird to make vague accusations without verifying anything.
This looks less like a model issue and more like a systems design problem.
A vague objective (“make money”) without constraints, budgeting, or basic rules will naturally lead to this kind of behavior. The agent just optimizes whatever it was given. The wage issue is similar.
So the real problem is we’re letting agents make decisions without any real governance (resources, policies, auditing).
Ah, I see that dril has gotten into the training data.
(Honestly, the headline kind of buries the lede, in that lots of shops underpay women and/or are a bit overly candle-obsessed: all the details of _this_ shop, however, are _bonkers_)
> None of the products have price tags, by the way, and the employees apparently aren't told what everything costs. Customers have to speak to Luna on a telephone handset by the iPad checkout system to find out what the price of something is, and she'll say, "Nice choice! That’s $14!" possibly picking prices out of thin air.
Although candies would've been more amusing
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