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13 votes
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'League of Legends' studio faces employee walkout, promises changes
14 votes -
How Fortnite’s success led to months of intense crunch at Epic Games
11 votes -
The company that sells love to America had a dark secret
8 votes -
Some high-profile male tech executives accused of sexual misconduct are getting second chances
4 votes -
Stop telling women to fix sexist workplaces
15 votes -
‘Colony of hell’: 911 calls from inside Amazon warehouses
9 votes -
Apple’s Hollywood venture marred by ‘intrusive’ execs, including Tim Cook
10 votes -
Anxiety, AWOL executives and "bloodshed": How Disney is making 21st Century Fox disappear
6 votes -
Harassment, transphobia, and racism: A look inside Blind's anonymous chatting forum for Google employees
12 votes -
“Most startups,” [Dan Lyons] writes, “are terribly managed, half-assed outfits run by buffoons and bozos and frat boys.”
9 votes -
Dr. Elon & Mr. Musk: Life inside Tesla's production hell
13 votes -
Mark Zuckerberg's biggest problem: Internal tensions at Facebook are boiling over
12 votes -
Google staff walk out over women's treatment
23 votes -
At Netflix, radical transparency and blunt firings unsettle the ranks
4 votes -
Google reveals it has sacked forty-eight employees over sexual harassment over the past two years
10 votes -
What will be left of the people who make our games?
20 votes -
One year of #metoo: A modest proposal to help combat sexual harassment in the restaurant industry
5 votes -
Riot Games says it wants to clean up its mess, but the people who made it are still there
17 votes -
Blind loyalty - How a social network is redefining the future of corporate culture
14 votes -
The dehumanization of human resources
I realize that businesses want to draw talent from the largest pool possible, and to do so available positions are often advertised simultaneously across several job market websites with audiences...
I realize that businesses want to draw talent from the largest pool possible, and to do so available positions are often advertised simultaneously across several job market websites with audiences larger than what almost any company could reach on their own. Certainly some steps of the application process must be automated when dealing with, what I can only imagine, is a relatively high number of applicants. Websites like Indeed.com have even automated the phone interview process, having applicants take a robo-call and recording their responses to questions selected by the employer. The result, in my own experience, is an often bleak, one-sided, discouraging and depressing bout of dysfunctional online dating, except the relationship you're looking for is with your future employer.
Are there any HR people on Tildes? If so, I'm curious what this whole process looks like on your side and how it differs from say, twenty years ago. Is the process better? Are the people you hire better? How, on your end, could this process be improved? And most importantly, do you have any advice for getting through this increasingly frustrating first step?
23 votes -
Inside the culture of sexism at Riot Games
32 votes -
Google struggles to contain employee backlash over China censorship plans
26 votes -
Deliveroo threatens to terminate workers after losing their contracts
1 vote -
Foodora dishes out punishment to injured riders in 'oppressive' policy, ABC investigation reveals
2 votes -
Ellen Pao - The perverse incentives that help incels thrive in tech
29 votes -
Workplace sex harassment inquiry launched
2 votes -
Videogame developers are leaving the industry at an unprecedented pace: Gamasutra asks "Why?"
14 votes -
Inside Theranos’ dysfunctional corporate culture
6 votes -
Google removes 'don't be evil' clause from its code of conduct
21 votes