2025 was a wake-up call for corporate governance. Amazon pulled AI-generated recaps that invented plot points, and Deloitte Australia had to refund government fees after AI errors in a report.
That's why companies like Google, Cisco, and McKinsey are reintroducing in-person interview rounds — a human checkpoint in an AI-driven hiring process. In the age of "AI Architects" (TIME, 2025), AI can verify facts and automate screening. But humans remain essential to assess intent, integrity, and deeper judgment — the qualities that machines can't reliably evaluate on their own.
The goal is no longer to replace judgment. It's to design systems that enhance it.
"This is not just a technological shift; it is a societal inflection point. As intelligence scales, so must our responsibility to guide it. We must define clear actions and ask urgent questions: How do we ensure humans retain and expand their agency in a world increasingly run by machines? Will human intelligence be diminished, augmented, or fundamentally transformed? How do we keep AI aligned with human goals, cultural values, and regional realities?" — AI House Davos 2026