Intentar ORO - Gratis
THE PRETENDERS
WIRED
|July - August 2025
Remote colleague? Keeps the camera off in meetings? Might be a North Korean operative who sneaked in to your company with a stolen identity and a heavy dose of ChatGPT.
ON PAPER, THE FIRST candidate looked perfect. Thomas was from rural Tennessee and had studied computer science at the University of Missouri. His résumé said he'd been a professional programmer for eight years, and he'd breezed through a preliminary coding test. All of this was excellent news for Thomas' prospective boss, Simon Wijckmans, founder of the web security startup C.Side. The 27-year-old Belgian was based in London but was looking for ambitious, fully remote coders.
Thomas had an Anglo-Saxon surname, so Wijckmans was surprised when he clicked into his Google Meet and found himself speaking with a heavily accented young man of Asian origin. Thomas had set a generic image of an office as his background. His internet connection was laggyodd for a professional coder-and his end of the call was noisy. To Wijckmans, Thomas sounded like he was sitting in a large, crowded space, maybe a dorm or a call center.
Wijckmans fired off his interview questions, and Thomas' responses were solid enough. But Wijckmans noticed that Thomas seemed most interested in asking about his salary. He didn't come across as curious about the actual work or about how the company operated or even about benefits like startup stock or health coverage. Odd, thought Wijckmans. The conversation came to a close, and he got ready for the next interview in his queue.
Once again, the applicant said they were based in the US, had an Anglo name, and appeared to be a young Asian man with a thick, nonAmerican accent. He used a basic virtual background, was on a terrible internet connection, and had a single-minded focus on salary. This candidate, though, was wearing glasses. In the lenses, Wijckmans spotted the reflection of multiple screens, and he could make out a white chatbox with messages scrolling by. "He was clearly either chatting with somebody or on some AI tool," Wijckmans remembers..
Esta historia es de la edición July - August 2025 de WIRED.
Suscríbete a Magzter GOLD para acceder a miles de historias premium seleccionadas y a más de 9000 revistas y periódicos.
¿Ya eres suscriptor? Iniciar sesión
MÁS HISTORIAS DE WIRED
WIRED
LOST IN MEATSPACE
I took RFK Jr.’s advice and ate nothing but high-protein foods for a week.
7 mins
July/August 2026
WIRED
HE CAN'T RESIST
FOR MONTHS, RAFAEL CONCEPCION has obsessively vibe coded tools to thwart the federal immigration crackdown. He's also lost his job and BECOME TARGET.
20 mins
July/August 2026
WIRED
HOLLYWOOD ENDING
Screenwriters like me have resorted to gig work as AI trainers. It’s bad.
19 mins
July/August 2026
WIRED
THE SAD WIVES OF AI
Are you married to a man who's obsessed with AI? I'm so, so sorry.
9 mins
July/August 2026
WIRED
AGENTS OF CHAOS
Between Claude Code's epic problem-solving and OpenClaw's madcap powers, computing is undergoing its biggest transformation yet.
11 mins
July/August 2026
WIRED
Will AI Destroy Your Career?
Some jobs may be toast. Some will survive. Circle your answers to learn your fate.
2 mins
July/August 2026
WIRED
THE STREAMY, SCREAMY DIGITAL LIFE OF HASAN PIKER
The far-left Twitch streamer and self-described “Ayatollah of Woke” is addicted to Twitter and hates, hates, hates AI.
1 min
July/August 2026
WIRED
ARM'S RACE
Numerous chip companies license their designs from the influential IP firm Arm. Now its CEO, Rene Haas, is shaking up the industry by launching a chip of his own.
7 mins
July/August 2026
WIRED
CHAD VS. THE ALGORITHM
Every day, AI job screeners reject countless applicants for seemingly no good reason. Armed with a stellar résumé, some Python, and a white-hot feeling of injustice, one medical student decided to fight back.
15 mins
July/August 2026
WIRED
PROVE ME WRONG
Can AI do fact-checking? A WIRED fact-checker fact-checks.
7 mins
July/August 2026
Listen
Translate
Change font size
