
1. Use of AI in Recruitment and Hiring
AI is transforming the recruitment landscape across the globe, making processes such as resume screening and candidate engagement more efficient by:
- using keyword searches to automatically rank and eliminate candidates from a pool of applicants with minimal human oversight;
- performing recruitment tasks via chatbots that interact with candidates;
- formulating skills and aptitude tests; and
- analyzing video interviews to assess a candidate’s suitability for a particular position.
In addition to maximizing efficiency, AI may also be used to make automated, substantive decisions related to recruitment, hiring, and performance through the use of predictive analytics that forecast a candidate’s success in a specific role.
2. Regulation of AI Use in the European Union and United States
The European Union has taken a united approach to AI regulation, and all EU member states are currently governed by the EU Regulation on Artificial Intelligence (EU AI Regulation), which took effect on Aug. 1, 2024. The EU AI Regulation’s scope applies to all providers and deployers based in the EU, as well as those that place an AI system on the EU market or use the results of an AI system in the EU. Parties located outside the EU should therefore be aware that the EU AI Regulation may apply to them, as well.
The EU AI Regulation categorizes AI systems into different risk categories, with the applicable rules becoming stricter as the risk to health, safety, and fundamental rights increases (for example, “minimal” regulation for spam filters; “limited” regulation for chatbots; “high” regulation for use in recruitment; and “unacceptable” use of AI for social scoring and facial recognition). HR tools are considered high-risk AI systems if they (1) are used for recruiting or selecting candidates; and/or (2) provide the basis for HR employment-related decisions, e.g., promoting or terminating employment or monitoring and evaluating performance and behavior.
As of Feb. 2, 2025, the EU AI Regulation requires companies to eliminate “unacceptable” AI systems (as defined by the law) and to thoroughly and comprehensively train all employees using AI systems with respect to compliant AI use under the regulation.
In contrast to the EU, the United States does not currently have uniform AI regulations on a federal level. Though the Biden administration had tasked government agencies such as the Department of Labor and the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission with monitoring the use of AI tools and issuing guidance to enhance compliance with anti-discrimination and privacy laws, in January 2025, President Trump expressed his support for deregulation, issuing an executive order entitled “Removing Barriers to American Leadership in Artificial Intelligence Issues.” Federal agencies have since removed all previously issued guidance on AI use.
In response to the executive order advocating for AI deregulation, regulations governing the use of AI have been introduced and passed on the state level. However, legislation passed does not always become legally binding. For example, in February 2025, the Virginia legislature passed the High-Risk Artificial Intelligence Developer and Deployer Act, which would have required companies creating or using “high-risk” AI systems in employment as well as other areas to implement safeguards against “algorithmic discrimination” for such systems. However, the governor vetoed the Act on March 24, 2025, and so the Act does not currently apply.
Read the full Alert.