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52 votes
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Linus Tech Tips pauses production as controversy swirls
121 votes -
As its moderators remain on strike, Stack Overflow introduces "Overflow AI"
48 votes -
Madison Reeve explains why she quit Linus Tech Tips (CW: self harm, slurs, sexual harassment)
167 votes -
The workers at the frontlines of the AI revolution
12 votes -
Evernote, the memory app people forgot about, lays off entire US staff
93 votes -
Elon Musk and Twitter sued over unpaid severance packages
75 votes -
OpenResume
8 votes -
America's first law regulating AI bias in hiring takes effect this week
13 votes -
How Microsoft's ruthless employee evaluation system annihilated team collaboration
66 votes -
Military AI’s next frontier: Your work computer
16 votes -
Inside the AI factory: The humans that make tech seem human
14 votes -
Google parent Alphabet tells workers to be wary of AI chatbots
5 votes -
CodeWeavers, maker of open source Wine software used in Linux gaming, transitions to employee ownership trust
14 votes -
r/antiwork seems to be back (was it really gone?)
tl;dr IDK what happened before, but r/antiwork is public now (again?). I just stumbled across this tildes thread from 2 weeks ago [EDIT: crap ... 1 year and 2 weeks ago; mixed up my "current year"...
tl;dr IDK what happened before, but r/antiwork is public now (again?).
I just stumbled across this tildes thread from 2 weeks ago [EDIT: crap ... 1 year and 2 weeks ago; mixed up my "current year" setting] ... which is right on the border between "keep posting in that thread" and "it's too old, start a new one" ... so here we are.
I'm familiar with the ideas, but never heard of that specific subreddit before. Looking through the Fox interview, I must be missing something, because I don't understand what all the fuss was about. What "mistake" did the mod make in the interview? Why did everyone suddenly hate her? etc. Seemed perfectly innocuous to me (apart from, why even bother with Fox).
But that aside, the previous thread indicates that r/antiwork was effectively bullied into going private. Looking at it this morning, it is not private. I am assuming that they just recently de-privatized it?
On a side-note, top comment on the thread is about not supporting r/cringetopia ... which ... that subreddit is private. Is that also new? It had me confused for quite awhile this morning, trying to figure out which subreddit was actually under controversy and forced to go private.
4 votes -
Elon Musk bans remote work at Twitter, warns staff of “dire” economic outlook
16 votes -
Facebook parent company Meta will lay off 11,000 employees
14 votes -
First thing: Twitter sued by former staff as Elon Musk begins mass firing
15 votes -
Twitter is planning to start charging $20 per month for verification. And if the employees building it don’t meet their deadline, they’ll be fired by Elon Musk.
27 votes -
Chinese tech giants are creating a new class of elite workers in Latin America
6 votes -
AI won't take coders' jobs. Humans still rule for now.
4 votes -
Food delivery drivers fired after ‘cut-price’ GPS app sent them on ‘impossible’ routes
8 votes -
Creators are mitigating burnout with longform YouTube videos
8 votes -
Leaked Amazon memo warns the company is running out of people to hire. Unions might not be the tech giant’s biggest labor threat.
18 votes -
Meet Freshii’s new ‘virtual cashier’ — who works from Nicaragua for $3.75 an hour
10 votes -
Job search and placement services
I've decided I'm going to start looking for a new job. I'm a software product manager in the US and will be looking for senior positions, hopefully remote. Has anyone used a service to help find...
I've decided I'm going to start looking for a new job. I'm a software product manager in the US and will be looking for senior positions, hopefully remote. Has anyone used a service to help find jobs before? This is the first one I've come across and I'm considering it.
https://www.findmyprofession.com/career-finder/Any thoughts or feedback welcome. Thanks.
3 votes -
New York Times tech workers vote to certify union
19 votes -
The New York Times Tech Union vote count starts this morning, and we made a live vote tracker!
17 votes -
Shades of DevOps: Related job titles
4 votes -
/r/antiwork: A tragedy of sanewashing and social gentrification
19 votes -
Popular subreddit r/antiwork goes private after Fox interview
Many of you might be familiar with the popular and massively growing antiwork/work reform movement that found a home in the r/antiwork subreddit. Well, recently, the founder of the subreddit was...
Many of you might be familiar with the popular and massively growing antiwork/work reform movement that found a home in the r/antiwork subreddit. Well, recently, the founder of the subreddit was invited on Fox news for an interview and
it went about as well as you could expect(We shouldn't support r/Cringetopia) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3yUMIFYBMncSub is now private, an offshoot called /r/WorkReform has been launched and everyone hates the old mods now.
41 votes -
US National Labor Relations Board sets NYT Tech Guild election, rejects attempts to exclude workers
7 votes -
Tech sector job interviews assess anxiety, not software skills
8 votes -
Facebook's reputation is so bad, the company must pay even more now to hire and retain talent
12 votes -
Webcams
There was a very brief period of time in the late 90s early 00s when the word “webcam” had just started existing and entering the popular discourse; and where that word was practically synonymous...
There was a very brief period of time in the late 90s early 00s when the word “webcam” had just started existing and entering the popular discourse; and where that word was practically synonymous with “sex show”.
I think around the time I first heard that word, having a webcam usually meant you would use it to do nude shows with.
They weren’t integrated with computers back then (laptops were super expensive and not popular yet, and they weren’t a mainstream laptop accessory until way later). So if you had a webcam, you had to really seek it out and pay quite a bit of money for it. It made little sense for people to buy them just to use them for personal reasons and most jobs didn’t have a utility for them.
… except sex work. Live, paid access cam shows immediately caught on. And people would see those in ads (ads tended to be trashy with zero quality control back then, even automated. Worse than now, I swear), and associate “webcam” with “webcam show”.
There was no reason to otherwise hook up a camera to a computer if not to stream its contents to the web, anyway. The first webcam, that famous coffee pot, was just that: a web-connected camera. Web cam. Wikipedia talks about “Jenni cam” — I wasn’t on the anglosphere’s internet at the time so this escaped me, but it does seem to agree that the concept entered the mainstream not via videoconferencing, but via cam girls.
5 votes -
Hackers are spamming businesses’ receipt printers with ‘antiwork’ manifestos
13 votes -
Rise of the (fast food) robots: How labor shortages are accelerating automation
10 votes -
Grazily - highly targeted jobs in your inbox
5 votes -
"The Hiring Post" - How to hire exceptional engineers
11 votes -
Backpage founders' trial begins
6 votes -
OnlyFans drops planned porn ban, will continue to allow sexually explicit content
35 votes -
Some background regarding the recent OnlyFans changes
26 votes -
Technical leadership and glue work
4 votes -
OnlyFans will prohibit "content containing sexually-explicit conduct" (but still allow nudity) starting October 1, at the request of banking/payment providers
50 votes -
Inside Facebook’s metaverse for work
4 votes -
You can now practice firing someone in virtual reality
6 votes -
Cows using virtual reality and the future of work
5 votes -
The nonmachinables
3 votes -
Apple employees are going public about workplace issues
6 votes -
Inside the all-hands meeting that led to a third of Basecamp employees quitting
30 votes