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Employees ready to trick AI tracking tech, Gartner finds
Tue, 9th Feb 2021
FYI, this story is more than a year old

A new Gartner study has revealed that by 2023, 10% of workers will seek to trick artificial intelligence (AI) driven tracking systems used to measure employee behaviour and productivity.

Such systems have seen a significant uptick in use in the wake of the COVID-19 pandemic, the analysts state.

Organisations are using AI-enabled systems to analyse worker behaviour in the same way that AI is used to understand shoppers, customers or members of the public.

These tools provide basic activity logging with alerts, or in more sophisticated versions, can attempt to detect positive actions or misbehaviour through multivariable analysis.

Gartner finds that many employers use productivity monitoring systems despite a high percentage of workers finding such tools unappealing.

Even prior to the pandemic, Gartner research showed that workers feared new technologies used to track and monitor work habits.

As these tools become more prevalent, Gartner predicts that organisations will increasingly face workers who seek to evade and overwhelm them.

According to the analysts, workers may seek out gaps where metrics do not capture activity, accountability is unclear, or the AI can be fooled by generating false or confusing data.

Such activities have already been observed in digital-first organisations. For example, ride-share drivers sometimes work for two different services simultaneously as a way of maximising personal earnings.

Gartner distinguished research vice president Whit Andrews says, “Many businesses are making a permanent shift to full- or part-time remote work, which can be both costly and require cultural changes.

“For management cultures that are accustomed to relying on direct observation of employee behaviour, remote work strengthens the mandate to digitally monitor worker activity, in some cases via AI.

“Just as we've seen with every technology aimed at restricting its users, workers will quickly discover the gaps in AI-based surveillance strategies.

"They may do so for a variety of reasons, such as in the interest of lower workloads, better pay or simply spite. Some may even see tricking AI-based monitoring tools as more of a game to be won than disrespecting a metric that management has a right to know.

Andrews offers advice for employers looking to implement employee tracking technologies.

He says, “IT leaders who are considering deploying AI-enabled productivity monitoring tools should take a close look at the data sources, user experience design and the initial use case intended for these tools before investing.

“Determine whether the purpose and scope of data collection supports employees doing their best work. For those that do decide to invest, ensure that the technology is being implemented ethically by testing it against a key set of human-centric design principles.