
訴訟指控Workday的AI歧視40歲以上求職者
一項集體訴訟指控Workday的AI招聘工具可能基於年齡、種族、殘疾和性別等受保護的特徵,不公平地篩選掉求職者。該訴訟於2023年提起,正在尋求更多原告,並聲稱違反了《就業年齡歧視法》。
Straight Arrow News
Workday hires for millions. A lawsuit seeking plaintiffs says its AI shut out applicants over 40

Summary
AI hiring bias
A collective-action lawsuit alleges that Workday's artificial intelligence program used in hiring processes disadvantaged certain applicants, including those who are Black, disabled, female or over the age of 40.
Legal proceedings
The suit, first filed in 2023, alleges violations of the Age Discrimination in Employment Act. Four individuals have joined the suit seeking damages and changes to how Workday uses AI in hiring.
Workday's response
Workday denies all allegations in the lawsuit, saying the company's products are built to help our customers manage an ever-increasing volume of applicants and that its AI is not trained to use protected characteristics including race, age or disability.
Full story
An artificial intelligence program used by one of the largest HR services companies in the U.S. allegedly put resumes of applicants who were Black, disabled, female or over 40 behind other job candidates. Workday’s hiring recommendation practices are the subject of a collective-action lawsuit that is seeking additional plaintiffs.
The lawsuit, initially filed in 2023, alleges Workday’s technology “disadvantaged” Derek Mobley — a Black, disabled IT professional over the age of 40 — in application pools due to his age. Mobley said he had applied for more than 100 jobs over several years only to be rejected, sometimes quickly. Mobley also says Workday’s technology discerned his race through his attendance at Morehouse College, a historically Black school, and rooted out his anxiety and depression via assessments and personality tests.

Download the SAN app today to stay up-to-date with Unbiased. Straight Facts™.
Point phone camera here
In some cases, Mobley said, his application to a job that matched his experience was rejected in under an hour.
His lawsuit alleges Workday’s actions violated the Age Discrimination in Employment Act (ADEA). Four others later joined Mobley’s suit.
Mobley is seeking back pay, front pay, and other damages on behalf of the potentially millions who would qualify. The suit also asks for a ruling stating that Workday discriminated against the applicants and an order stopping Workday from using AI in the manner it is accused of.
Collective-action lawsuits are similar to class actions but concern employee-employer disputes via the Fair Labor Standards Act. Members of a collective-action suit must opt-in before they’re involved, where a class-action suit is the opposite.
The plaintiffs are now seeking people to join the suit, but only those who were rejected because of their age. The window to join at this stage of the case closes March 7.
Workday’s response
Workday denies the allegations. Although the case was filed in 2023, a judge has yet to rule on whether the HR company has any liability, only saying in 2025 that the case can proceed.
“The claims in the suit are false,” Connor Spielmaker, Workday’s corporate communications principal, told Straight Arrow News. “Our products, both AI-enabled and not, are built to help our customers manage an ever-increasing volume of applicants with a focus on human decision-making.”
He added that Workday’s AI recruiting tools are not trained to use or identify protected characteristics like race, age or disability.
B2B analytics firm 6Sense lists Workday with 25% of the total market share of HR firms of its kind. The expansive nature of the company’s footprint means that a collective-action suit could see millions of qualified people, according to court filings.
Motion to dismiss
A judge initially dismissed Mobley’s case but allowed his attorneys to refile. Workday filed to toss the suit in 2024, claiming that the software vendor didn’t have liability for hiring decisions made by its customer companies, but U.S. District Judge Rita F. Lin in the Northern District of California didn’t buy that argument.
While she did rule that Workday’s programs weren’t intentionally discriminatory, the judge allowed Mobley’s team to make its case that the programs enabled the discrimination.
Start your day with fact-based news.
Learn more about our emails. Unsubscribe Anytime.
Daily Newsletter
AI in hiring
The use of artificial intelligence in hiring practices isn’t limited to HR departments. SAN reported in May 2025 that services had emerged allowing job-seekers to use AI to apply for potentially hundreds of jobs in a short period of time.
Companies like Wobo.ai and others, for a fee, are able to take a job hunter’s data, preferred positions and other information, scan for applicable openings and apply without the user’s input.
The practice has turned screening candidates into a large-scale data project. A Workday Recruiting study said job applications were 31% higher in the first half of 2024 than in the comparable period of 2023. Meanwhile, job openings increased only 7%.

SAN provides Unbiased. Straight Facts.™
According to media bias experts at AllSides

Awarded a perfect reliability rating from NewsGuard

Why this story matters
Allegations that Workday's AI hiring software discriminated against applicants based on age, race, disability or gender raise questions about algorithmic bias and accountability in employment practices, potentially affecting millions of job seekers and HR processes nationwide.
AI bias in hiring
Concerns about artificial intelligence systems reflecting or amplifying discriminatory practices in hiring highlight ongoing challenges with fairness, transparency and equal opportunity in automated recruitment tools.
Legal accountability
The collective-action lawsuit against Workday, and the court's decision allowing it to proceed, sets a precedent for how technology vendors may be held responsible for potential discrimination resulting from their products.
Impact on job market
With AI-driven applications on the rise and HR platforms handling larger applicant pools, the outcome could influence how millions experience hiring processes and shape future employment regulations.
SAN provides Unbiased. Straight Facts.™
According to media bias experts at AllSides

Awarded a perfect reliability rating from NewsGuard

Trending stories
Supreme Court ruling on Trump’s tariffs still on hold
FBI assumes control in Minnesota ICE killing; Border Patrol shooting rocks Portland
Trump calls off second Venezuela strike as Senate moves to rein him in
Police say federal agents shot two people in Portland
Sources
Sources
Related stories

Lawsuits try to hold AI companies accountable for defamatory content

US citizen files class action lawsuit after being detained by ICE

An AI bot used their words. Now, authors are demanding compensation

DHS sees surge in ICE applications amid hiring push

Disney, Universal seek $150K per image in new AI lawsuit

Trump closes out Middle East tour in Abu Dhabi
Related stories

Lawsuits try to hold AI companies accountable for defamatory content

US citizen files class action lawsuit after being detained by ICE

An AI bot used their words. Now, authors are demanding compensation

DHS sees surge in ICE applications amid hiring push

Disney, Universal seek $150K per image in new AI lawsuit

Trump closes out Middle East tour in Abu Dhabi
Welcome back to trustworthy journalism.
According to media bias experts at AllSides.

Perfect reliability rating, according to experts at NewsGuard

Finally, unbiased news that lets you see both sides. It’s refreshing to have facts without the spin.”
This app gives me the news without pushing a political agenda, which is rare to find.”
Unbiased news.Directly to your inbox. Free!
Stay connected


Terms and Conditions
|
Privacy Policy
|
Copyright Policy
|
Cookie Settings
|
Sitemap
©️ 2026 Straight Arrow News
Daily Newsletter
Start your day with fact-based news
Start your day with fact-based news
Learn more about our emails. Unsubscribe anytime.
By entering your email, you agree to the Terms and Conditions and acknowledge the Privacy Policy.
相關文章