
A semi-qualified Chartered Accountant shared a virtual interview experience where he was instructed to keep his hands visible in a 'Namaste' position and close his eyes while answering questions during a 20-minute session with a BPM division of a global digital services firm. Despite complying, he was later flagged for alleged AI use and rejected. The candidate described the process as uncomfortable and questioned the fairness of such strict anti-cheating measures in virtual hiring.
The articles present a range of perspectives focusing on the candidate's experience without political framing. They highlight corporate hiring practices and candidate reactions, reflecting concerns about technology use and fairness in recruitment. The coverage includes the candidate's viewpoint and broader public discussion on virtual interview protocols, maintaining a neutral stance without partisan bias.
The overall tone across the articles is mixed, combining the candidate's frustration and discomfort with the interview process alongside factual reporting of the events. While the experience is portrayed as unusual and challenging, the coverage avoids overt negativity or praise, instead emphasizing the candidate's perspective and the broader debate on anti-cheating measures in virtual interviews.
Each source's own headline, political lean, and sentiment — so you can see framing differences at a glance.
| Source | Their headline | Bias | Sentiment |
|---|---|---|---|
| ndtv | Accountant Told To Stay In 'Namaste Position' With Eyes Closed In Bizarre Virtual Interview | Center | Negative |
| hindustantimes | Job seeker forced to fold hands and close eyes during bizarre virtual interview | Center | Negative |
| indiatvnews | Candidate says he sat in 'Namaste position' during virtual interview, still got flagged for AI use | Center | Neutral |
| indiatoday | Interviewer's anti-cheating namaste trick for candidate leaves Reddit stunned | Center | Neutral |
indiatoday broke this story on 20 May, 03:10 pm. Other outlets followed.
Well-covered story — coverage matches public importance.
Institutions and figures named across source coverage.
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