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by BlargMcLarg 1476 days ago
You obviously can't take the above in a vacuum and think it's fine. You could say the same for the advice of "give people work which resembles what the company does" leading to a situation akin to having interns doing minimum wage work for free, putting pressure on others as a result.

But as things stand, nothing is preventing companies from doing the above anyway. If they think you're a bad fit, they will use the probationary period to cut ties with you. This is perfectly viable today. Your example assumes current filtering methods do in fact increase the ratio of true : false positives, and taking some of them out would decrease that ratio. This is not something that has been proven, and I'd even argue it's something that can't be reasonably proven within the next few years. This is even worse when considering a few interview rounds can only filter for the most obvious dummies, but can't decisively tell you the performance of that individual a few weeks down the line.

What your example does show is how much power employers have over employees. It just isn't healthy for individuals to have to carry this amount of risk while corporates continue to reap the benefits.