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Duolingo Prioritizes AI Over New Hires
Information Age
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- Date Published
- 30 Apr 2025
- Priority Score
- 3
- Australian
- Yes
- Created
- 5 May 2025, 05:43 pm
Authors (1)
Description
CEO willing to take ‘hits on quality’.
Summary
Duolingo has adopted an 'AI-first' mandate, potentially affecting their hiring policy by only allowing new hires if a task cannot be automated. This decision reflects a broader industry trend where companies like Shopify and Canva are also moving towards significant AI integration, potentially impacting employment within those organizations. In Australia, reports indicate a third of the workforce could face job instability by 2030 due to AI proliferation, prompting concerns about necessary policy frameworks and readiness. The use of AI in both corporate and public sectors highlights the pressing need for governance structures to mitigate societal impacts.
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Duolingo bans new hires in favour of AICEO willing to take ‘hits on quality’.By Denham Sadler on May 01 2025 10:49 AMPrint articleDuolingo wants AI before new human hires. Photo: ShutterstockDuolingo will only allow its teams to hire new people if they can prove the work cannot be automated with artificial intelligence as part of the language learning giant’s “AI-first” mandate.The company is now one of several tech giants to have placed a major emphasis on the transformational capability of AI and either constrained hiring or cut jobs to focus more on automation.In an email to staff that wasalso posted on LinkedIn, Duolingo co-founder and CEO Luis von Ahn said the move to being “AI-first” would require a significant rethink as “making minor tweaks to systems designed for humans won’t get us there”.“In many cases, we’ll need to start from scratch,” Ahn said in the email.“We can’t wait until the technology is 100 per cent perfect.“We’d rather move with urgency and take occasional small hits on quality than move slowly and miss the movement.”As part of these changes, Duolingo will “gradually stop using contractors to do work that AI can handle” and look for AI use in hiring and performance reviews.He emphasised that the company still “cares deeply about its employees” and the move “isn’t about replacing Duos with AI”.Instead, it’s about “removing bottlenecks” so that its workers can “focus on creative work and real problems, not repetitive tasks”.“It helps us get closer to our mission,” Ahn’s email said.“To teach well, we need to create a massive amount of content, and doing that manually doesn’t scale.“One of the best decisions we made recently was replacing a slow, manual content creation process with one powered by AI.“Without AI, it would take us decades to scale our content to more learners.“We owe it to our learners to get them this content ASAP.“When there’s a shift this big, the worst thing you can do is wait.”AI-first tech firmsThe Duolingo shift comes soon after e-commerce giant Shopifyannounced a similar policy around AI.For Shopify, teams that want to request more headcount or resources will need to first show “why they cannot get what they want done using AI”.“What would this area look like if autonomous AI agents were already part of the team?” Shopify CEO Tobi Lutke told employees in early April.“This question can lead to really fun discussions and projects.”The Shopify CEO went on to say that “reflexive AI usage” within the company is now a “baseline expectation” and using AI effectively is a “fundamental expectation” of all employees at the company.Australian tech giant Canva earlier this yearlaid off most of its technical writing teamamid an expanded use of AI.Ten of the company’s 12 technical writers have reportedly been made redundant this year.It’s understood that Canva does not view the job cuts as a direct result of its wider use of AI.AI in the public serviceAI is actively reshaping workplaces, automating tasks and threatening job security for many Australians.According to the Social Policy Group, if the rate of AI adoption in Australia continues,one-third of the entire workforce could experience a period of unemploymentby 2030, with workers needing to embrace continuous learning to brace for this.The Australian Public Service has also toyed with the use of generative AI tools within the workforce, with a trial of Microsoft’s Copilot toolencountering some “adoption challenges” and concernsamong employees of its impact on jobs and the environment.The Australian National Audit Office recently found that at least 20 government entities wereusing AI last year without any policies in place governing its use.Most of these agencies were using the technology to help with research and development, IT systems administration, and data and reporting.Centrelink alsotrialled AI models to predict fraudulent welfare claimsand which debts to prioritise recovering, but has revealed few details about these.Denham SadlerDenham Sadler is a freelance journalist based in Melbourne. He was previously Editor of StartupSmart, and writes on tech and politics. His work has been published inThe Saturday PaperandThe Guardian.Tags:duolingoaihiringjobs