No, it was over video. The person was verbally reciting whatever ChatGPT gave to them. Their answers were verbally "I apologize for any inaccuracies, blah blah blah".
That is pretty depressing. It's funny how easy it would be to not give yourself away too. It's ridiculously easy to spot some of the general ChatGPT tells and simply not recite them.
There's a button on ChatGPT in my iPhone app that allows me to switch it to microphone mode rather than needing to type it. An off screen tap and you can get the results.
I'm sure that some people have hooked up the whisper model so that it can tap a desktop audio out and feed ChatGPT too.
Typing during an interview is pretty common since many people (interviewers and interviewees alike) take notes during interviews, so the typing alone didn't stand out as unusual.
I once concluded an interview with a candidate who was rather conspicuously engaged in clandestine typing, subsequently rectifying their previously incorrect answers. I suspected they were resorting to Google, given this was before ChatGPT came out. Much to my surprise, they ended up landing the job.
And if someone's ability to answer questions using search tools in real time is sufficient to impress a series of interviewers, they're probably quite resourceful at finding solutions to problems they've been given a few hours to solve
I don't know what exactly happened there. The two of us conducting the interview advised against this candidate in our report. About a month later the candidate was introduced as a new hire on a different team and I never saw them again in a company of <100 people.
Even without the answers, I can't imagine I wouldn't realize by the pace and format of the responses that they were simply read to me instead of said.
I've never had such experience and it seems very low effort.
In any case there's absolutely no risk of someone passing an interview with ChatGPT on our end because it's about seeing how people think and what they've experienced.