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9 votes
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Plenty of American workers aren't being told to work remotely—even though they could
8 votes -
Which workers are most vulnerable to the economic costs of COVID-19?
5 votes -
Facebook is giving $1,000 to all of its 45,000 employees
4 votes -
Denmark is helping those who can't work due to coronavirus – why isn't the UK?
4 votes -
Ford weighing shift reductions as UAW presses Big Three US automakers to close factories
5 votes -
Work From Home (WFH) Thread - March 16th, 2020
I suspect many of you are, like me, working from home today and in the near future. I thought that it might be nice to have a single thread where we can chat about WFH and our day to day lives...
I suspect many of you are, like me, working from home today and in the near future. I thought that it might be nice to have a single thread where we can chat about WFH and our day to day lives while self-isolating in order to feel a bit less isolated. If people think this kind of thing is a good idea, perhaps this can be a daily (or weekly o_o) thread.
Feel free to talk about:
- Day to day life at home
- What's on your agenda for work
- Your thoughts on self-isolating and quarantine.
- Casual talk that you might normally have with coworkers .
- Anything else! (Though of course, the rest of the site still exists)
I personally tend to get more work done while working from home as there are less interruptions in the form of meetings and informal breaks. So in a weird way I'm looking forward to this time in order to get quite a bit done. Still, it's hard not to get cabin fever.
How are you all doing?
19 votes -
Twenty-four video conferencing tips to go from telecommuting zero to hero
5 votes -
Apple’s COVID-19 response
8 votes -
Workers at Pacific Grove Hotel on leave without pay due to virus quarantine
5 votes -
Two nurses denied jobs as midwives in Sweden because of their refusal to perform abortions have lost their legal action against Sweden at the ECHR
10 votes -
Walmart sets emergency leave policy for 1.4M hourly workers
14 votes -
If the female employment rate across the OECD matched that of Sweden, OECD GDP could be boosted by over US$6 trillion, according to PwC's latest Women in Work Index
5 votes -
Supporting Google's extended workforce through the COVID-19 outbreak
6 votes -
How the working-class life is killing Americans, in charts
26 votes -
Because of Coronavirus, vendors are offering special videoconferencing deals. Here's a roundup of what's available
11 votes -
What happened when Tulsa paid people to work remotely
9 votes -
Companies are contracting out more jobs—that’s not great for workers
10 votes -
The problem with telling sick workers to stay home
7 votes -
The boss who put everyone on $70,000 minimum salary
22 votes -
BP worker sacked over Hitler parody video gets his job back
6 votes -
Silicon Valley ruined work culture
15 votes -
Garbage language: Why do corporations speak the way they do?
10 votes -
I spoke out against sexual harassment at Uber. The aftermath was more terrifying than anything I faced before
16 votes -
Four-day workweek's appeal goes global as bosses seek to boost profits and morale
22 votes -
Opinion: The unspoken truth about managing geeks
9 votes -
Germany: court rules sanctions on unemployment benefits unconstitutional
10 votes -
What do you do when asked to automate away other peoples' jobs?
At work there's a project that was originally pitched as an automated system we would build for a new client, and now the conversation has shifted towards automating away some data entry tasks for...
At work there's a project that was originally pitched as an automated system we would build for a new client, and now the conversation has shifted towards automating away some data entry tasks for an existing client. If the project is successful I would guess that some or all of the people doing the data entry tasks would be out of a job. And if it's a resounding success I would guess that the powers that be would be eager to apply it in other areas and potentially put more people out of jobs.
This project is in the very early stages of gathering requirements and whatnot so it's not really clear what exactly we're building or what my role in building it would be. But it involves a technology that's new to us (natural language processing) and often times I end up playing some role in a project that involves learning something new, even if it's just in some small way.
So yeah, I know automation replacing low-skill work is nothing new and if these jobs can be automated away, they will be sooner or later, but this is the first time I've been confronted with the idea of using my skills to put people I don't know out of a job and it sticks in my craw. Normally I love automation and interacting with new (to me) tech even if it's nothing groundbreaking and I'm just doing the plumbing to connect system A to interface B, but in the past it's always been in the name of freeing up people from tedious tasks so that they can do more interesting and more important work, rather than "freeing" them of their paycheck. So I'm finding myself adding this to the small but compelling pile of frustrations I have with this job and weighing it against the also-small but also-compelling pile of things I love about it.
Anyway, if you've ever been in a position where you were asked to automate away someone else's job, how did that go? What did you do?
If you haven't, what do you think you would do?
16 votes -
A novel way to prevent email overload
7 votes -
Working in science was a brutal education. That’s why I left
5 votes -
Confessions of a slaughterhouse worker
23 votes -
Kickstarter workers vote to form first union in tech industry
20 votes -
A group of agents rose through the ranks to lead the US Border Patrol, and now they’re retiring and leaving it in crisis
5 votes -
HQ Trivia, the top trivia game on the app store in early 2018, is ceasing operations and terminating all staff today
11 votes -
Busting the common misconceptions about working from home
10 votes -
No engineer has ever sued a company because of constructive post-interview feedback. So why don’t employers do it?
13 votes -
Costco capitalism
9 votes -
Extreme Silicon Valley: A 2:30 AM bus from Salida. Tech employees move all the way into the Central Valley. Private tech shuttles follow.
6 votes -
The strangest job listings in tech
4 votes -
The way we work is killing us - An interview with the author of Dying for a Paycheck
15 votes -
Will the 2020s be the decade that the robots finally come for our jobs?
7 votes -
Five top designers imagine the workplace of 2040
5 votes -
Is sex work bad?
Prompted by a recent tildes post about vice, and also this from the bbc, and a conversation with a colleague who just went to a strip club, I keep thinking about this issue. I have a stake in...
Prompted by a recent tildes post about vice, and also this from the bbc, and a conversation with a colleague who just went to a strip club, I keep thinking about this issue.
I have a stake in this, despite being cis male: I have mother, sisters, wife, and most importantly young daughter. And I am a feminist, on simple moral grounds.
My baseline position is that whether a woman chooses to engage in sex work is, and should be legally and socially supported as, entirely her own choice.
The only question I have any business answering, or participating in finding an answer, is whether my patronage of sex work is inherently exploitive, to either the woman whom I am patronizing* or to other women individually or to womanhood and general issues of gender.
And I just can’t come up with a good answer. I do look at porn, but increasingly, as with meat, the potential ethical problems of it are reducing the enjoyment. I have tried to ease my conscience by limiting myself to cartoons and stories, but those wouldn’t stop the harm that is caused by the mere existence of porn, if any exists.
As a purely practical matter, the existence of the industry leads to opportunities for exploitation of individuals, and the advancement of a culture of gender exploitation. But as the war on drugs has so ably demonstrated, any attempt at prohibition only increases the level of exploitation, while smart regulation decreases it. Regardless, though, there’s plenty of exploitation to go around the world, I heard there’s thing called #metoo.
I come from a sex-suppressing, fundamentalist “Christian” background. The quotes are there to indicate that I think much of the practices were anything but christ-like. The principles there swirl through the culture around me in varying degrees of intensity, and they inform and direct my choices (sometimes against my will and my better hopes and ideals). I have to be open to the notion that any objection I have to sex work, or my participation, is entirely a cultural construct. And while I don’t think it is true, I cannot dismiss the notion that morals themselves may have no possible objective existence, having relevance and utility (if at all) only in very time and space limited scopes.
It is what I believe the sociologists call a “wicked” problem. It involves really complicated normative stances, and there’s no data analysis that can provide any guidance. For myself, I expect my participation to continue to wane as I mature. I only hope that whatever I do only further enables and empowers the women in my life and everywhere.
- I almost stopped myself from using this word when I realized potential implications, but ultimately left it in because it (and the fact it was my natural inclination to select it) really highlights the issue for me and hopefully others
Bonus hypothetical: If porn is somehow wrong and harmful, even drawings and writings, are sex fantasies also wrong?
30 votes -
The fight to make bad jobs better
4 votes -
Too many of America’s smartest waste their talents
11 votes -
Who killed the weekend?
9 votes -
YouTube moderators are being required to sign a statement acknowledging the job could give them PTSD
26 votes -
Is it really just sexism? An alternative argument for why women leave STEM
22 votes -
Why do so many incompetent men become leaders? And what can we do about it?
15 votes -
How to create events to help girls prepare for STEM careers
13 votes