
"Opening day at the Media Days at CES brought an unexpected discovery: an AI proctor designed to detect whether someone being remotely questioned might be using AI for answers. Has its time come? Or is it an unfair tool that creates more problems than it solves? For several years, the Media Days have kicked off with a startup pitch competition hosted by the Japan External Trade Organization (JETRO) in partnership with Showstoppers, which also hosts numerous media events at CES."
"Qlay Tom Nakata is the co-founder and CEO of Qlay which has created AI Proctor that does just that. The tool listens in on remote interviews and detects if the interviewee is using AI to generate an ideal answer to a question and who then reads it off a teleprompter. It works by detecting eyeball movement and speech analytics. It also has a feature where the interviewee can be required to log into the Qlay app and set up their mobile phone"
An attendee at CES's Media Days discovered an AI proctor that detects when a remotely questioned person might use AI to generate answers. The proctor analyzes eyeball movement and speech analytics and can require a mobile phone as a side camera for a secondary check. The tool targets cheating in online tests and interviews by identifying when candidates read AI-generated responses from a teleprompter. The startup Qlay developed the AI Proctor and presented the technology during a startup pitch competition hosted by JETRO and Showstoppers. The technology raises practical and ethical questions about accuracy, fairness, and legal implications.
Read at Above the Law
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