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25 votes
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George Orwell’s opposition to totalitarianism was rooted in his support for freeing workers from poverty and exploitation
24 votes -
At twenty airports in the United States, security screening is handled not by the Transportation Security Administration, but by private companies — and their checkpoints aren’t seeing long lines
22 votes -
ArXiv is separating from Cornell University, and is hiring a CEO, who will be paid roughly $300,000/year
42 votes -
A survey of 1,000 hiring managers found that 59% say they emphasize AI’s role in layoffs because it is viewed more favorably than saying layoffs or hiring freezes
42 votes -
René Redzepi, the head chef and co-founder of Noma, announced he was resigning from his internationally acclaimed Copenhagen restaurant following allegations that he had physically abused his staff
25 votes -
Survey reveals almost 50% of California teachers may quit teaching soon
44 votes -
Yakult ladies are an icon in Japan
22 votes -
Workers who love ‘synergizing paradigms’ might be bad at their jobs
24 votes -
Meta’s AI smart glasses and data privacy concerns: workers say “we see everything”
37 votes -
Spotify's strong revenue isn't reflected in its stock market performance – investors fear growth will stall, while artists are voicing frustration over what they consider a miserly compensation system
24 votes -
Norway's sovereign wealth fund impressed by artificial intelligence's ability to catch risks overlooked by both the media and external vendors
11 votes -
Swedish heavy metal band Avatar cancel London concert mid-performance after the stage at Exhibition White City became electrified, shocking two crew members
17 votes -
Binance employees find $1.7 Billion in crypto was sent to Iranian entities
17 votes -
Why Vegas doesn't care if you visit anymore
35 votes -
‘So tired I want to cry’: AI promotional giveaways swamp shops in China
13 votes -
Jeff Bezos bought The Washington Post to save it. Instead, with a mass layoff, he’s forced it into severe decline.
19 votes -
Jeff Bezos orders layoffs at 'The Washington Post'
49 votes -
Ashes of Creation founder resigns as studio begins mass layoffs
26 votes -
Alphabet plots big expansion in India as US restricts visas
20 votes -
Recruiter harassed me whilst off sick. Considering filing a complaint. How best to handle this?
The recruitment agency I temp with are a major multinational player in the market, have a bit of a reputation for being sharks (based on feedback I've seen about them on Reddit and Trustpilot.)...
The recruitment agency I temp with are a major multinational player in the market, have a bit of a reputation for being sharks (based on feedback I've seen about them on Reddit and Trustpilot.) They're a publicly listed company who absolutely 100% should know better.
I caught a really nasty virus two weekends ago and had been practically bedridden for nearly a week. For the first two days of calling in sick, I logged into my work laptop and messaged my line manager via Teams. On Wednesday morning, I was advised that I should also keep my agency in the loop, so I instead sent her an email, ensuring to copy in the recruitment consultant who is my point-of-contact (I'll just call him Ben.)
At roughly 3:40 PM, Ben sends me a snarky WhatsApp message out of the blue. "you know we can see your details on job boards lol." I left him on read because 1. I'm in bed and 2. My job search is frankly none of his business.
He then called me and proceeded to all-but-accuse me of pulling sickies to attend interviews, going behind his back to apply for jobs. He asked me if I even considered how bad I was going to make him and the agency look if I quit my job, then proceeded to interrogate me about my contact I had with other recruiters and warned me to delist myself any job boards moving forwards. I complied, purely because I wanted to shut him up and didn't want to start a further argument, when in my head I just wanted to verbally chew him out.
I don't appreciate being intimidated and guilt-tripped about my job search, especially when I am genuinely unwell, and I am seriously thinking about lodging a formal complaint with the agency, but I'm also worried about facing retaliation for this.
AFAIK, I have not signed into a contract preventing me from applying for roles with other employers or agencies. I'm also on a temp zero-hours contract that is due to finish in less than three weeks where either party can terminate it without notice or liability. There is the possibility of the work assignment being extended, or me being offered a permanent role but I don't intend to stay beyond this. This was a decision I made to myself weeks before Ben's recent asshole behaviour. Other than that, I literally have nothing lined up.
Has anybody had experiences raising formal complaints with recruitment agencies? The agency does have a complaints procedure and a dedicated quality care team that investigates formal complaints.
32 votes -
An acquired taste - Gourmet magazine relaunching as worker-owned cooperative after Condé-Nast lets trademark elapse
18 votes -
I no longer trust the stats that companies publish on the gender equality in their tech roles
I am really not sure if this topic belongs in ~tech or ~society or ~talk but I trust the moderators to re-assign accordingly. So, this is the layout of the "development" team of my companies....
I am really not sure if this topic belongs in ~tech or ~society or ~talk but I trust the moderators to re-assign accordingly.
So, this is the layout of the "development" team of my companies.
there are 4 "development" teams which reports to the development manager who also occasionally codes.
There is one team, that's the one I am on. 7 people, 6 males.
there is another team, 4 people, 3 males.
there is another team, 5 people, 4 males.
The last team, I don't really consider "development" team. its a team of 4 females. What they are best suited for is QA in the sense of manually testing the product to ensure the experience is sufficient for push to PROD, But because of budget restrictions, they are being forced to learn code and testing suites so they can be the people to develop our testing structure. They are great people and excellent Manual QAers but they really are not developers.All our tech managers and team leads are men with the exception of the team lead for QA (obviously).
And just to be clear, the culture is friendly and respectful and no complaints. It's just the gender ratio is pathetic.
So our tech gender ratio is really 17 people and 3 women which is 17%.
If you want to consider the QA team a dev team to bump up the numbers, you get 21 with 7, that's still only 33%.At a recent company meeting, they were talking about how diverse our workforce is and blah blah blah (I tune out most of that stuff as we are fully remote and I spend most of my time coding), but then they showed a slide that claimed our gender ratio for tech roles was like 50% or something.....
I message a colleague at work, being like "where on earth did they get that number??", he was like ":shrug: maybe they are counting the people who use the product we are making?"
To clarify that, the product we work on is rarely used by external customers. Instead we have employees who know how to use our product and correspond on our behalf with external customers. So all these employees are doing is using a webapp the real tech employees develop.
So long story short, my company pulled a number out of nowhere to claim we have gender equity in the tech roles and now I dont know how to trust any stats a company puts out about how equal the gender roles are in their "tech" departments.
31 votes -
Staff at a major Swedish pharmacy chain are being given paid time off to spend with friends, as the government calls on businesses to help play a role in tackling loneliness
17 votes -
The pointe shoe makers of Hackney
20 votes -
AI might not be coming for lawyers’ jobs anytime soon
7 votes -
AI will likely affect administrative and operational jobs in heathcare
26 votes -
Taylor Swift gave $197 million in bonuses to Eras Tour performers and crew, on top of their salaries
26 votes -
How to get found by recruiters on LinkedIn
30 votes -
The San Francisco Bay Area shortage of dental hygienists
21 votes -
As US-based company Lyten prepares to restart battery production, Northvolt's downfall has cast a chill over Sweden's ambitions to reindustrialize around clean technology
9 votes -
New Zealand supreme court ruled that Uber drivers are employees
40 votes -
AI makes an appearance at my union meeting
I had an interesting experience this week. Not all union meetings are interesting, even if they are useful. Yesterday was a pleasant exception where it was both useful and interesting. For the...
I had an interesting experience this week. Not all union meetings are interesting, even if they are useful. Yesterday was a pleasant exception where it was both useful and interesting. For the first time, I witnessed AI coming up as a topic of conversation. There is no secret that people fear losing their jobs due to AI automation, and sure enough I saw proof of it to the extent that the union may consider adding some clauses around protecting jobs from AI.
How is it at your workplace? Where I work, this year I witnessed a very strong push to use AI. Messaging around using AI at town halls, messaging around using AI in team meetings, articles on the intranet site, IT events around how to craft good prompts, etc. I would not be surprised if they tied some leaders' bonuses to how much they can get their teams to use AI. This part is quite annoying to me, not to mention deceitful. If I were a leader I'd straight up tell my team about it. I am not a leader - leaders are not part of the union to begin with.
The whole thing made me also think about how my colleagues use AI. It really is a mixed bag. I see everything from the person who runs a 2-line email through AI five times to finetune every word, to myself who only reach for AI when I am stuck and it's just much faster than a search engine/forums/videos to solve my issues (for example needing a script in a programming language I am not familiar with).
37 votes -
US libraries scramble for books after giant distributor shuts down
25 votes -
New World is dead: Amazon ends new content updates following massive layoffs, says 'servers will be live through 2026'
32 votes -
Strike at Tesla's Swedish service centres has now reached its second anniversary, and there is little prospect of a resolution
27 votes -
Pharmaceutical firm Novo Nordisk shaken up as seven board members quit – departures follow disagreement between board and majority shareholder over future governance
22 votes -
Grand Theft Auto made him a legend. His latest game was a disaster.
34 votes -
Burbank Airport resumes flights after hours with no air traffic controllers amid government shutdown
14 votes -
Ten years after it was founded, Metal: Hellsinger studio The Outsiders is closing – fallen victim to the Funcom layoffs announced last week
6 votes -
Developer Starbreeze Studios announced Thursday it had canceled its co-op Dungeons & Dragons game – re-focusing on its Payday franchise
13 votes -
Funcom, the Oslo-based studio behind the recently released Dune: Awakening, has announced it will be laying off staff
17 votes -
Avalanche Studios' UK office is set to be closed as part of a workforce restructure – will also impact their Swedish studios in Stockholm and Malmö
11 votes -
McDonald’s redraws battle lines on subminimum wage
29 votes -
Play Airlines said it was ceasing operations, becoming the second low-cost airline in Iceland to collapse in the last six years
7 votes -
Over 50% of the job cuts in video games are in California
28 votes -
The day when three NASA astronauts staged a strike in space
20 votes -
Gavin Newsom, California lawmakers strike deal that would allow Uber, Lyft drivers to unionize
30 votes -
To avoid hiring North Koreans, Coinbase now requires in-person orientations
11 votes -
Open AI announces $1.5 million bonus for every employee
22 votes