The traditional human resources department has undergone a digital transformation, with many job seekers encountering Automated Decision-Making Technology (ADMT) systems as the first point of resume review. These tools have recently faced criticism for a hidden bias that disproportionately affects women, particularly mothers returning to the workforce. As legal professional Donniece Gooden notes, the legal landscape is finally catching up to these black-box algorithms, providing new protections that every professional should understand.
The primary concern for many women is the employment gap. Algorithms trained on legacy data that favored continuous, 30-year career paths might automatically down-rank a resume showing a two-year hiatus. Whether that gap was for childcare, eldercare, or personal health, an unmonitored AI may interpret it as a lack of recent skill, effectively filtering out highly qualified female candidates before they ever reach a human interview.
To combat this, new regulations have taken center stage in 2026. Specifically, California's ADMT rules and similar emerging frameworks in New York and Illinois now require companies to perform Bias Audits. Companies must now disclose if AI is being used to screen, rank, or reject candidates. Employers are legally required to prove through third-party testing that their software does not produce a disparate impact based on gender or family status.
Perhaps the most significant shift in 2026 is the Right to Opt-Out. Under many of these new state laws, candidates have the legal standing to request that their application be reviewed by a human rather than an algorithm. In an era of automation, the right to a human perspective is becoming a fundamental workplace protection, explains Donniece Gooden. Understanding that you can legally demand a human-in-the-loop is the first step in reclaiming control over your career trajectory.
If you suspect an algorithm is unfairly filtering your application, consider these steps. Check the disclosure by looking for a Digital Recruitment Disclosure on the job posting. In certain jurisdictions, you have the right to see the results of the company's most recent AI bias audit. Exercise the opt-out by selecting the option for manual review, especially if your resume contains non-traditional career paths or significant gaps. For more insights into how 2026's new laws affect your daily life, stay tuned to this series at https://www.hierophantlaw.com.



