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Human Times helps you stay ahead of the latest news and trends that impact the HR industry. Every weekday, our unique blend of AI and team of expert HR and employment editors and researchers monitor 100,000s of articles, and social posts to create summaries of the most relevant and useful content to help you lead, innovate and grow. The award winning Human Times newsletter has four geographical editions with news tailored to your region.

From HR leadership to diversity and inclusion, hybrid working, organisational data, performance management, and retention strategies, Human Times is the only trusted free online news source dedicated to covering the most up to date headlines, articles, reports and interviews to make sure you’re abreast of changes in the HR industry.

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Recent Editions
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Human Times
North America
Meta to pause internal mouse-tracking tech

Meta is pausing an internal program that tracks ​employee mouse movements and digital activity for AI training amid reports that sensitive employee data, intended to monitor digital interactions within Meta's internal systems, was accessible to all Meta ​workers. "We have carefully designed this program ​with privacy safeguards and while we have no indication at this time that ​any data was improperly accessed by Meta employees, we're pausing it while we investigate," said Meta spokesperson Tracy Clayton. The tool - Model Capability Initiative (MCI) - was launched in April.

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Human Times
UK
UK business rejects call to set maximum workplace temperature as heatwave deepens

UK businesses and the government have pushed back on calls to introduce a maximum working temperature, after trade unions launched a “heat strike” ahead of record-breaking weather, the FT reports. The Met Office has issued a red alert for today, while warning that temperatures will build significantly as the week continues, and said there is the possibility of failures of heat-sensitive systems and equipment that could lead to losses of power, water, and transport disruption.

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Human Times
Europe
Mercedes to discuss additional cost cuts with workers

Mercedes-Benz is to commence talks on additional cost cuts with union leaders as the German carmaker expands its use of AI to drive savings amid growing pressure from US tariffs and dwindling sales in China. The company wants AI to lift productivity and reduce expenses across functions; around 60% of employees use AI daily, and Mercedes is targeting 70% by the end of the year. “We need to evaluate, have we done everything within Mercedes, within Germany, to be more competitive against our rivals,” human resources chief Britta Seeger said. “We need to make sure Germany does everything to be a competitive country.” Bloomberg notes that the company's workers are protected from forced redundancies via agreements internally known as the ZuSi (short for Zukunftssicherung, or future security). Natural attrition and voluntary redundancies have so far been the firm's preferred method to reduce staff numbers.

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Human Times
Middle East
Dubai leads debate on future of work

Dubai is embracing AI to enhance public sector operations, the Dubai Government Human Resources Department (DGHR) Multaqa 2026 forum has heard. The event focused on how Agentic AI can transform decision-making and workforce planning while ensuring human oversight remains central. The forum also introduced DGHR's White Paper on Agentic AI Governance, outlining the opportunities and risks of AI in human resources. Abdullah Ali Bin Zayed Al Falasi, director general of DGHR, said: “Artificial intelligence can support work, analyse information and provide recommendations, but it cannot replace human judgement or assume responsibility for decisions. Technology can enhance the way we work, but people must remain the custodians of judgement, accountability and public value.”

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