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A North Carolina software engineer already secured an accommodation allowing her to avoid using AI at work based on her religious beliefs.
Pope Leo XIV’s recent encyclical on AI could set off a wave of workers seeking religious exemptions from using the tech at work.
One software engineer in North Carolina already secured one last month, Business Insider reports.
Erin Maus, a Unitarian Universalist, first sought the accommodation in April at the large tech-entertainment company where she works, which she described as progressive. She argued that using AI did not align with her religious beliefs because of environmental and ethical concerns.
Maus was granted the exemption in May, before the pope’s AI remarks.
“I’m writing my code and reviewing my code by hand, which seems crazy to say,” Maus told Business Insider. “Just two years ago, how else would you do it?”
Continued below.
gizmodo.com
Pope Leo XIV’s recent encyclical on AI could set off a wave of workers seeking religious exemptions from using the tech at work.
One software engineer in North Carolina already secured one last month, Business Insider reports.
Erin Maus, a Unitarian Universalist, first sought the accommodation in April at the large tech-entertainment company where she works, which she described as progressive. She argued that using AI did not align with her religious beliefs because of environmental and ethical concerns.
Maus was granted the exemption in May, before the pope’s AI remarks.
“I’m writing my code and reviewing my code by hand, which seems crazy to say,” Maus told Business Insider. “Just two years ago, how else would you do it?”
Continued below.
The Pope’s AI Warning Could Help Workers Seek Religious Exemptions From Using AI
A North Carolina software engineer already secured an accommodation allowing her to avoid using AI at work based on her religious beliefs.