Google is laying off more employees and hiring for their roles outside of the U.S.

  • @ReallyActuallyFrankenstein
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    2207 months ago

    The latest cuts come as the company enjoys its fastest growth rate since early 2022, alongside improving profit margins. Last week, Alphabet reported a 15% jump in first-quarter revenue from a year earlier and announced its first-ever dividend and a $70 billion buyback.

    Repulsive.

    • @[email protected]
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      1037 months ago

      So they ditch the people who helped make them successful? What kind of ass-backwards strategy is this?

      • @[email protected]
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        7 months ago

        “Juice the next 3 months.”

        Thats it. Thats the whole strategy each exec uses until they leave.

        • @[email protected]
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          247 months ago

          How can I get one of these jobs? Important detail I’m not rich.

          Seems like a low skill job.

          • @[email protected]
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            127 months ago

            Quick answer this one question.

            You are given a button that upon pressing kills 100,000 people. The button does nothing else.

            Do you press the button?

            • Promethiel
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              7 months ago

              Of course not. Why would I risk limiting our market share that way?

              I demonstrate synergy and the ability to run an agile ship by instead outsourcing development of an app charging 1,000,000,000 people $15 monthly for the privilege of pressing the button and posting that they weren’t it this month.

              Then I press it, because we must make sure our actions align with increasing shareholder value.

              • @[email protected]
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                7 months ago

                Ahh, see you have a conscience. Sorry you’re not billionaire material.

                I would have accepted:

                “Yes, for the mere thrill of it”

                “Yes, they deserve it”

                “Yes”

                “No, that isn’t nearly enough”

                “Yes, it’s my right”

        • @[email protected]
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          197 months ago

          Yup, and that’s why monopolies are bad. Once you get a dominant position, the way to increase profits is by abusing your market position. And publicly traded companies need to increase profits because that’s what shareholders expect.

          In this case, reducing the quality of search means people need to search more often, which means they see more ads. As a double-whammy, if you improve the relevance of the ad results while reducing the relevance of the regular results, you get more click-through on the ads. So Google has little incentive, while it has a dominant position, of having a good search product. They’ll only care again if that dominance gets threatened.

        • @[email protected]
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          57 months ago

          I already made this comment on a completely different post, but it’s funny to see it’s fruition. McDonald’s executives bitching that fast food price increases have priced a lot of their low income customers off their menu… like they had no hand in it

      • @[email protected]
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        47 months ago

        Yes. They have let go people that worked there for over 15 years.

        I believe what Mark Zuckerberg said about the tech layoffs, streamlining by getting rid of more management roles.

        • @[email protected]
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          17 months ago

          I could imagine them letting AI (or offshore workers) manage everything, and keeping the managers around with chatbots reporting in to the managers, so they wouldn’t know they were being replaced.

  • @[email protected]
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    7 months ago

    Let the death of the programming industry as a respectable professional job be a warning to centrist workers in other industries what happens when you don’t unionize and just assume your personal talent will always be rewarded by the ruling class.

    It won’t.

    Also let the rhetoric computer programmers use to defend the intrinsic value of their livelihood be a lesson to all of us. They talk in terms of raw productivity, in terms of securing a living wage through being more savvy than people who are dumb and take manual labor jobs. They speak about the threats of automation with COMPLETE confidence it will only be used by their bosses to create more jobs for people like them.

    Finally, let it be a lesson that the confidence of programmers who look at AI/LLMs and think “they can never replace me with that, it would be a disaster” totally misses the point that it doesn’t matter to the ruling class of the tech world that replacing tech worker jobs with shitty automation or vastly more underpaid workers won’t work longterm. The point is to permanently devalue and erode the pride and hard fought professionalism of programming (Coding Bootcamps have the same objective of reducing the leverage of workers vs employers).

    ^ Programmers make a classic person-who-is-smart-at-computers mistake here of trying to understand business like it is a series of computer programs behaving rationally to efficiently earn money

    I have met a nauseating amount of programmers who truly believe that tech companies would have to come crawling back to them if they fired tech workers in the industry en masse and everything began to break. What these programmers don’t understand is yeah, they will come back, but they will employ you from the further shifted perspective that you are an alternative to a worthless algorithm or vastly underpaid human when they do. That change in perspective, that undercutting of the “prestige” of being a skilled programmer is permanent and will never revert.

    Shit is dark… but also damn if I don’t have a tiny bit of schadenfreude for all the completely unfounded self confidence and sense of quiet superiority so many people who work with computers project when doing something like teaching a classroom of 20 kids or fixing someone’s plumbing problem is way fucking harder any day of the week.

    • @[email protected]
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      317 months ago

      First, unions don’t prevent mass layoffs. They might help make things more manageable and help some individuals in need but layoffs are entirely at the discretion of the business.

      And second, the industry is contracting because it hasn’t innovated in more than 5 years now. There is no growth vector but loads of people who aren’t producing value (not their fault, there is nothing to produce). Of course, better protection for employees is always needed, but as someone who watched an european company reduce its workforce from 110k people to 19k over the course of 3 years in early 2010s, i can guarantee that nothing can stop a business from maximizing profits.

      This is what we’re seeing now: the work is simply not needed.

      • @[email protected]
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        237 months ago

        They’ll say the work is not needed. That’s because the workload gets pushed to whoever is left. Is there a way you go from 110k employees to 20k and have no workload increase at all without some suffering some deficiencies somewhere in the product. Doubt it.

        Another thing is who decides what the employees work on. “Industry hasn’t innovated in x years” okay that’s on CEO/management they decide what products to invest time in. It seems all that’s left are barbarians in these companies. Possibly the visionaries have long been layed off it seems?

        • @[email protected]
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          97 months ago

          They’ll say the work is not needed.

          because it isn’t. Product lines which were supposed to grow and bring profit have become stagnant and useless. E.g. Alexa which was supposed to help amazon convince people to buy stuff but instead plays music in the morning. Normally there would be another growing sector to relocate the more overstaffed department but there isn’t. So.

          Is there a way you go from 110k employees to 20k and have no workload increase at all without some suffering some deficiencies somewhere in the product. Doubt it.

          That was done through closing down branches of the company which weren’t performing and automation in the rest. It wasn’t painless, far from it, but the point was that unions couldn’t stop it, not that it was fair or nice.

          Another thing is who decides what the employees work on. “Industry hasn’t innovated in x years” okay that’s on CEO/management they decide what products to invest time in. It seems all that’s left are barbarians in these companies. Possibly the visionaries have long been layed off it seems?

          sure, but what difference does it make? Yes, the stagnant technology market is directly the result of bad policies and poor investment. But that doesn’t help with the layoffs. That just is.

          • @[email protected]
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            87 months ago

            Normally there would be another growing sector to relocate the more overstaffed department but there isn’t.

            Knowing Amazon quite well, there definitely are sectors that are seriously deficient even new emerging ones within Amazon seem deficient.

            It wasn’t painless, far from it, but the point was that unions couldn’t stop it, not that it was fair or nice.

            I agree it wasn’t painless in fact there is a high suicide rate within the computer sciences field. In fact it probably still isn’t painless. I also agree unions are useless but some government regulation wouldn’t be.

            That just is.

            Yea everything is. Until it isn’t.

      • @[email protected]
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        7 months ago

        First, unions don’t prevent mass layoffs. They might help make things more manageable and help some individuals in need but layoffs are entirely at the discretion of the business.


        "There are several ways that unionization’s impact on wages goes beyond the workers covered by collec- tive bargaining to affect nonunion wages and labor practices. For example, in industries and occupations where a strong core of workplaces are unionized, nonunion employers will frequently meet union standards or, at least, improve their compensation and labor practices beyond what they would have provided if there were no union presence. This dynamic is sometimes called the “union threat effect,” the degree to which nonunion workers get paid more because their employers are trying to forestall unionization.

        There is a more general mechanism (without any specific “threat”) in which unions have affected nonunion pay and practices: unions have set norms and established practices that become more generalized throughout the economy, thereby improving pay and working conditions for the entire workforce. This has been especially true for the 75% of workers who are not college educated. Many “fringe” benefits, such as pensions and health insurance, were first provided in the union sector and then became more generalized—though, as we have seen, not universal. Union grievance procedures, which provide “due process” in the workplace, have been mimicked in many nonunion workplaces. Union wage- setting, which has gained exposure through media coverage, has frequently established standards of what workers generally, including many nonunion workers, expect from their employers. Until, the mid-1980s, in fact, many sectors of the economy followed the “pattern” set in collective bargaining agreements. As unions weakened, especially in the manufacturing sector, their ability to set broader patterns has diminished. However, unions remain a source of innovation in work practices (e.g., training, worker participation) and in benefits (e.g., child care, work-time flexibility, sick leave)."

        https://www.epi.org/publication/briefingpapers_bp143/

        https://files.epi.org/page/-/old/briefingpapers/143/bp143.pdf


        i can guarantee that nothing can stop a business from maximizing profits.

        You are not a union, you cannot stop a business from doing anything, together with your fellow workers however you can dictate anything about the behavior of your company that you and your fellow workers feel sufficiently passionate about enough to fight for.

        And second, the industry is contracting because it hasn’t innovated in more than 5 years now.

        Why should an industry bother innovating to increase dividends to shareholders with expensive and risky new technological ventures when it can just keep slashing labor costs and crushing employees under their foot? There is no economic incentive to innovate when unions don’t have the power to make executives think about choosing other less difficult paths than trying to directly reduce the quality of life of the companies employees.

        • @[email protected]
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          7 months ago

          you can dictate anything about the behavior of your company that you and your fellow workers feel sufficiently passionate about enough to fight for.

          no! That’s not how unions work in capitalism. A union can’t decide the business side of things. There’s a clear separation of responsibilities. There are, of course, other types of societies in which workers have this power, but then there’s not real point in debating the role of the union in that completely different context.

          There is no economic incentive to innovate when unions don’t have the power to make executives think about choosing other less difficult paths than trying to directly reduce the quality of life of the companies employees.

          Union-lead society wide innovation for the sake of the current workforce is probably the dumbest thing i’ve read in a while.

          • @[email protected]
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            7 months ago

            no! That’s not how unions work in capitalism. A union can’t decide the business side of things. There’s a clear separation of responsibilities

            Ahahahaha right, I love how you just accept the legally defined rights of what a union can do and what it can’t as if those laws in any given country aren’t just a record of the battlefield between the working class and the ruling class. A union can do whatever the fuck a union wants to do, and the law will attempt to constrain it in favor of the ruling class and capitalists to the degree that is politically tenable in a given environment. Sometimes it will be successful, sometimes it will fail, but unions fundamentally exist outside of capitalism because they have a level of legitimacy that capitalism and the idea of owning other people’s labor will never have.

            It hardly needs to be said that like libraries, if unions didn’t already exist as a concept there is no way they would be legal at all if they were developed in this day and age. Unions are only ever temporarily legal along limited contexts under capitalism.

            Union-lead society wide innovation for the sake of the current workforce is probably the dumbest thing i’ve read in a while.

            high five solidarity my friend, even when you insult my intelligence you are still far more my friend than my boss will ever be

            • @[email protected]
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              7 months ago

              Sorry, i wasn’t aware you were advocating for Anarcho-syndicalism. I thought we were having a conversation in good faith about the current situation. Good luck with your revolution

              • @[email protected]
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                17 months ago

                Hey bud, if you cant imagine a world without [oppression] please step aside. The rest of us have work to do to end the violence. We know it’s time.

                • @[email protected]
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                  17 months ago

                  The rest of us have work to do to end the violence.

                  I cannot imagine a world without oppression, this is true. However, I grew up long ago in a world where oppression came from those who said they’d overthrow it last time. They were using the same ideas you flaunt around and much like you (or whomever the person I was talking to before was), they had superficial understanding of what they were advocating for.

      • Veraxus
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        7 months ago

        Layoffs really need to trigger instant strikes. It boggles my mind that it’s not something they negotiate and protect. “No layoffs without prior negotiation and approval of severance terms by vote.” Break the terms… instant strike.

      • @[email protected]
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        107 months ago

        i can guarantee that nothing can stop a business from maximizing profits.

        Sure, it can, because I’m going to blow your mind: businesses aren’t about maximizing profits. It is ultimately about power, and money is a path to power. There are sometimes conflicts between power and money, though, and when there are, you can tell what they actually care about.

        None of the recent layoffs at Tesla make any sense what so ever. The Supercharger network may be the company’s best long term asset–they just got most of the industry to adopt their plug, and they have the largest existing network to support all those new EVs–yet they just canned the entire Supercharger team. The Cybertuck may be a dumb vehicle, but it’s still sold out for the next year, and shrinking the production line isn’t going to help anything. Nor would it help sell more of any other models. A $25k Tesla would be a game changer in a market that the rest of the industry hasn’t really entered yet, but they just canned development on new models.

        All while the company is still churning some kind of profit, even if it’s not as high as it was. These layoffs will absolutely have a long term impact on Tesla’s ability to compete at exactly the time when the rest of the industry is catching up with them.

        Does it even improve stock price? Maybe a one day jump or one week jump, but TSLA has been mostly flat for the last year and doesn’t look like it’s going to return to growth. Only bright side is that its P/E ratio now looks almost reasonable.

        None of this makes sense in terms of money. Barely does anything in the short term, and the long term damage is huge. This might be the beginning of the end of Tesla.

        If it doesn’t make sense in terms of money, then what else would work in that slot? Power.

        • Veraxus
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          37 months ago

          Wealth (whether it be “money”, resources, or anything else) and power are one and the same. Two sides of the same coin. Either one provides access to the other. I don’t think of them as separate or distinct at all… which is why it’s problematic for the aristocratic hoarders when plebes start to pool either and work collectively.

          • @[email protected]
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            57 months ago

            Oh, no, they’re not exactly the same. They wouldn’t come into conflict if they were the same.

            As another example, unions. Employees often see issues early on; perhaps a machine needing maintenance. A union can bring this up to management and put the pressure on to get it done. The business will save money in the long run with machines in proper maintenance.

            If it doesn’t get done, best case scenario is that it fails and the whole production line is shot until it’s fixed. Worst case, it fails more catastrophically and damages other equipment, or injures workers.

            Despite plenty of stories like this, companies will fight unionization efforts every time. Why? Because money doesn’t always align with power.

            • Veraxus
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              27 months ago

              Maybe something is getting lost in translation, but none of the things you mentioned seem to have anything to do with the point I’m making… so your ending claim that “money doesn’t always align with power” doesn’t seem related to anything I said or the scenario you posed…?

              • @[email protected]
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                37 months ago

                “Wealth and power are exactly the same”. This is the claim I’m disputing. If there are places where money and power are in conflict, then they can’t be the same. Your analysis of a situation will be have holes in it if this is not considered.

                • Veraxus
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                  27 months ago

                  If you’d care to dive deeper I’d like to be challenged on this; but your previous example of “maintaining things can avoid unnecessary costs later” (as I understand it) doesn’t have anything to do with “money and power can be in conflict”.

    • @[email protected]
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      167 months ago

      Generally agree with your points, even though I"m honestly not sure what a union would look like like in practice.

      But I just wanted to say that this job is definitely harder than plumbing. I usually do my own plumbing and it’s not really that bad. It’s not my favorite thing to do and can sometimes be a pain in the ass, but it’s way less taxing imo.

      Teaching kids is hard as fuck though and good teachers are priceless. Honestly quality caregiving of any sort is massively underrated.

      • @[email protected]
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        7 months ago

        Most programming (simple tasks, scripting data analysis, most common web apps, basic automation) is about as difficult as doing your own plumbing (which likely includes fixing a faucet or doing other minor tasks around the house). But just like in any profession, the “professionals” are able to handle the complex tasks that others can’t/don’t want to do. For plumbers that means building the whole home systems to maintain proper pressure/temperature at every outlet, suitable for whatever climate the home is built in, or in commercial settings where the systems are much larger and more complicated.

        Ask a professional plumber which they find more taxing: being bent into awkward spaces on their hands and knees all day, or sitting at a desk thinking hard about a problem someone has likely already solved.

        • @[email protected]
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          37 months ago

          But just like in any profession, the “professionals” are able to handle the complex tasks that others can’t/don’t want to do

          Borg Voice


          "We Are Pipes. "



          “Our Voice Is The Expression Of The Pipe.”


          “The First Technology was The Pipe.”


          “The Last Technology will be The Pipe.”


          “Some of us study reflections of the True Pipe through Computer Pipes.”

          “Some of us study reflections of the True Pipe through Shit Pipes”

          “We Are One”

          “We Are The Pipe.”

      • Sean Fern
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        47 months ago

        I’m an infrastructure engineer working at a government contractor and I’m in a union with OPEIU 1010, the tech workers’ local. Others are unionizing independently, with CWA, etc… It’s still early days for the tech industry but there are examples. We’re really not that different from other industries with a larger union presence.

        • @[email protected]
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          7 months ago

          Sure yeah, but like, I work remote and will always work remote (I live in a city with a pretty mediocre tech scene). On top of that, I work in a non-mainstream programming language (Haskell). So it’s hard to envision what I could actually do.

          I’m very pro-union btw, it just seems like there are certain things that can sometimes make it more difficult to make happen

    • @[email protected]
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      107 months ago

      Such a long rant about something so old and so universal as outsourcing.

      Not even outsourcing, they are internal hires, just elsewhere.

      • @[email protected]
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        147 months ago

        Such a long rant about something so old and so universal as *outsourcing

        *Class Warfare

        FTFY

          • @[email protected]
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            77 months ago

            Companies like google pressuring governments in India and Mexico to crack down on unions and work protections there is what it looks like for them and limitations on immigration (and the freedoms of those do immigrate).

            Free market of labor is never the real source of downward market pressure, IMHO. Its the veryil intentional policies ment to keep labor desperate.

          • @[email protected]
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            7 months ago

            You know how most of the software engineers in India feel? Like they are even more micromanaged, overworked and deprived of agency in the work place than US tech workers.

            I want software engineers and India and Mexico to earn a living wage just as much as I want software engineers living in my city to earn a living wage and have a workplace that treats them with decency (and doesn’t try to treat humans like robots).

            I am sure most Indians and Mexican software engineers feel that way about software engineers from other countries too.

            The only zero sum game here is between all of us and the ruling class and if you don’t see that now I hope one day in the future that thought will find you with an open mind.

            • @[email protected]
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              17 months ago

              I know how they feel because I work with them daily. They feel blessed because they earn sometimes 10 times more than their parents for work much less hard, in particular those coming from farming families. They are not earning a “living wage”, they are earning a “live almost in luxury” wage, 20 to 30 lakh a year, which is still 10 times less than silicon valley. They work in a nice office with Air Conditioning, or directly from home if they want.

              That being said, software engineers EVERYWHERE are earning “a living wage” at least. We are way overpaid, in fact, compared to social workers or teachers. A company with hundreds of thousands of employees relocating some positions to other countries is just mundane.

              • @[email protected]
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                17 months ago

                That being said, software engineers EVERYWHERE are earning “a living wage” at least. We are way overpaid, in fact, compared to social workers or teachers. A company with hundreds of thousands of employees relocating some positions to other countries is just mundane.

                Who said violence and class warfare can’t be mundane in practice?

                We are way overpaid

                No y’all aren’t, the problem is rather that everybody else is way underpaid

      • @[email protected]
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        7 months ago

        Outsourcing is the problem and you are called racist or xenophobic if you even mention it. Unions have nothing to do with it, they would only exasperate the speed of the transfer of knowledge and jobs to lesser developed countries with lower cost labor.

        The government needs to break up these oligopolies who have more money than the government itself. That money is spent on people who have no idea what is going on in the tech world, they just listen to the lobbyists, accept their checks and investment returns. They couldn’t care less about the long term effects.

  • Ebby
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    657 months ago

    OMG what if Google moves to India/Mexico permanently and is subject to the TikTok ban.

    Oh, I can dream. Haha!

    • @[email protected]
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      47 months ago

      What exactly do you mean? I know tiktok is banned in India. not sure about mexico. Are you saying that google would be banned like tiktok is?

  • ME5SENGER_24
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    637 months ago

    You know, firing C level employees creates a lottttttttta cap space for actual employees!

  • athos77
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    597 months ago

    Even during the height of the pandemic, a friend of mine found a ‘reason’ that they had to be in the office one day each week (usually Friday, because almost no one else was there on Fridays). Their reasoning was, “If I can do my job entirely from the comfort of my own living room, there’s nothing that would prevent the company from hiring someone to do my job from the comfort of their own living room, in India or the Philippines.”

    • Pleb
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      517 months ago

      There isn’t a reason the company couldn’t hire someone to do their job from an office in India or the Philippines either though.

      • @[email protected]
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        7 months ago

        Availability of talent used to be the traditional issue. Judging from the current trend of growing teams in these areas, either the talent pool has been growing there or the outsourced jobs are not the talent seeking ones. India, especially, has a low reputation as an outsourcing target.

    • @[email protected]
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      267 months ago

      Outsourcing was a thing way before the pandemic, but it was always a failure for, they never dared replace us when they noticed the bad results.

    • @[email protected]
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      147 months ago

      To be fair there are still a bunch of other aspects that may prevent even full remote jobs to be outsourced to other countries. Among others: language skills, time zone differences, cultural differences, legal frameworks and probably many more.

      To give an example for issues that may arise from these differences:

      An employee might cost your german company triple the salary in Germany compared to India. On paper it seems like an easy choice, you just outsource and even if you have to pay 2 person to do the job you still save money. But suddenly you run into many problems:

      • They will likely not speak German and maybe not even great English. This might be irrelevant for the actual work to be done. But do they exactly understand what the task is, can they give accurate feedback, can they make use of existing resources or do those need to be translated, can they communicate with the rest of the company or your customers?

      • They work in different time zones. And while most remote work is probably time agnostic, meetings with other team members, departments or your customers suddenly become much harder to schedule.

      • Their culture might be different. So e.g. they might not be as straight forward when running into problems and instead try to hide them, which will mean everything looks fine until the house of cards suddenly crumbles.

      • Having employees in different countries means you will need to have different workflows for hr to deal with contracts, payrolls, retirement plans, health insurance and so on. Also how does the other country handle IP, patents and non compete clauses? Could the employee just walk away and start their own business or go to your competitor? Or in reverse can you ensure that they e.g. don’t copy/paste code from somewhere else ignoring licenses.

    • @[email protected]
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      17 months ago

      If I can do my job entirely from the comfort of my own living room, there’s nothing that would prevent the company from hiring someone to do my job from the comfort of their own living room, in India or the Philippines."

      That’s one of the reasons I went into a field of technology where the work is mostly hands-on.

      Hardware maintenence, troubleshooting, installation and repair isn’t something that can effectively be done remotely.

  • @[email protected]
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    597 months ago

    This always comes down to the fact that labor is competitive. Why pay someone $200k/yeae when someone will do the job for $80k/year? Competition drives the prices of labor down. Maybe there needs to be better regulation for labor competition like corporations enjoy.

    • gian
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      307 months ago

      Why pay someone $200k/yeae when someone will do the job for $80k/year?

      Assuming the same job’s quality, a possible answer is “because to live where your company is you need to be paid $200K/year”

      • @[email protected]
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        47 months ago

        “because to live where your company is you need to be paid $200K/year”

        How do people live in these areas without making $200k/year?

        • gian
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          47 months ago

          They cannot, that is the reason you need to pay that much to work for you.

            • gian
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              17 months ago

              I don’t know, but if they live there, I think they have it that good.

              It is more (way more) probable that they just commute far enough away from there to have lower housing cost

    • @[email protected]
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      217 months ago

      What I don’t understand is why does competition matter for workers but somehow not for CEOs? I kind of understand and agree in the free market to an extent - if you’re fine with hiring a dev for $100 instead of another dev for $1000, and you’re okay with the difference in quality / time / etc. then go for it. But where is all this competition happening for CEOs?

      Surely someone must be as qualified as Bitchai and willing to do the same job for a measly 100 million a year instead of his 200 million.

      • @[email protected]
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        167 months ago

        Ceo pay is advertised and used against each other to get top dollar. Lowers like us have out pay hidden so companies can low ball without us knowing. That’s what needs to change. It should be law to be advertised pay rate so the lowballers get exposed and no one applies, forcing pay to go up.

      • @[email protected]
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        77 months ago

        but somehow not for CEOs?

        Workers do the actual work. CEOs just make decisions that anyone can make and they have a board of people usually backing them up.

        • @[email protected]
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          57 months ago

          What I’m perplexed at is - what if I went to the board and said “I have a guaranteed way to increase profit by 150 million - just pay me 50 million a year and fire Bitchai”. I would legit do my best to make great decisions for 50 million.

          Why doesn’t the board care about cutting costs by cutting CEO pay? I can’t imagine any difference that would really justify Bitchai 's pay difference.

          I also cannot imagine they are all part of some secret conspiracy where they all know each other and like each other so much that they just want to pay him that money because they’re buddies.

          Wouldn’t $150 million be more than enough justification to hire someone else?

          • @[email protected]
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            6 months ago

            This assumes that they aren’t hiring the CEO to be the fall guy. Someone who’s job is largely (as things stand now) meant to take on the risk that if the company does not increase profits or make shareholders happy, they will blame and fire that person and hire someone else.

            Since a lot of CEOs kind of bet on this they take ridiculous chances (like getting paid in stock options that only mature at a certain point with the knowledge that they need to make stock options valuable so they can cash out).

            Valuable doesn’t have to be long term. It just has to last long enough for the person in question to cash out.

        • @[email protected]
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          17 months ago

          CEOs just make decisions that anyone can make

          LMK when your company hits a billion dollars in revenue and we’ll see how easy the job is.

  • @[email protected]
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    477 months ago

    There needs to be a tech workers union. The abuse from employers needs to end. Especially the endless free overtime.

  • @[email protected]
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    427 months ago

    Corporate shenanigans afoot at many companies it seems. I’m sure this will pay off grandly.

  • Veraxus
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    397 months ago

    Every day, they somehow figure out ways to get even more evil. We’re dialed up way past 11 now.

  • @[email protected]
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    7 months ago

    Is it a move to save money or a move to weaken the position of all those employees who objected to the questionable contracts with many intelligence agencies?

    I can bet that they will ensure that the new employees will be selected among those who have no qualms.

    • @[email protected]
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      47 months ago

      India is pro-israel. Especially upper class Hindus who are the majority of tech workers in IT companies.

  • @[email protected]
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    357 months ago

    Just got laid off 2 days ago. They laid off the entire marketing team leaving only the head developer and the web manager.

    They then had the galls to ask us if we wanted to stay for 6 months so we can train OUR FUCKING POSITIONS TO INDIA FOR THEM. We could take that or just leave and take a 2 month severance.

    1/2 of me wanted to take the opportunity so I can sabotage the company by making it worse for them, but my dignity wouldn’t let me do it.

    Back to job boards again…

    Also, while I’m on this soapbox, wtf is up with these fucking companies asking people to do FREE work just to be considered for an opportunity. Wait, this is a LIVE campaign? My work might be used for things other than to show my abilities.

    arg~!

    • @[email protected]
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      7 months ago

      Not sure what you’re referring to, but Microsoft has always had security incidents because they make the platform(s) that almost everyone uses, and so is commonly the target for malicious actors. This has been the case with Microsoft as long as Windows has been the dominant OS which is since the 90s. Not sure what hiring people outside of the US has to do with this.

      • @[email protected]
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        127 months ago

        He’s referring to cheap labor and cheap code written by people who don’t care and who are managed by a chain of people with a different set of goals, values and national loyalties.

        The plan for world domination by M$ has always been about building up countries to save $. Especially one in particular with 3-4x the “human resources” that allow themselves to be mined at a fraction of the price that still gives them a better life.

        • @[email protected]
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          67 months ago

          with a different set of goals, values

          Absolutely true. Profit motive, JIT employment, etc

          and national loyalties.

          I’m sorry, what? Indian programmers are a problem because they’re disloyal?

          • @[email protected]
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            47 months ago

            Not necessarily disloyal. But different loyalties.

            Microsoft makes software used by governments all over the world. Any government that want to gather intelligence or blackmail another government could do it through inserted exploits in Microsoft’s code. The US could go straight to Microsoft to this in an official capacity. Other nations would influence the individuals working on the project to do it covertly. If your country asked you to do this, they are likely able to convince you it’s in the national interest and you would be harming your country if you didn’t.

            It’s not that they wouldn’t be loyal, it’s who they would be loyal to.

            • @[email protected]
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              47 months ago

              Any government that want to gather intelligence or blackmail another government could do it through inserted exploits in Microsoft’s code.

              You know, its funny. There was a recent documentary on Netflix, called “The Octopus Murders” that goes into a theft committed by the Reagan DOJ of a $6M software suite called PROMIS. The suite was edited and repackaged, then distributed to foreign governments under a new Reagan-Admin friendly vendor with a collection of backdoors and security bugs that US officials could use to infiltrate networks of allied nations.

              If our efforts to rapidly and comprehensively outsource all our software overseas resulted in the same thing reflected back on us, I would find that very amusing.

              But I’ve yet to see any actual evidence of malfeasance by overseas coders. More often - in my personal experience working with overseas software companies - they’re overworked, underpaid, and in a race deliver quantity over quality.

          • @[email protected]
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            27 months ago

            Not what I meant, more about the idea that they have their own loyalties to family, local businesses, growth of their own businesses if they leave (which they will start in their area), that type of thing. Not a slight on work ethic or generalization of actual people.

            Hopefully that makes that more clear.

      • @[email protected]
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        117 months ago

        It’s also because they fucking suck at managing complexity. Almost everything they make is fourteen arbitrarily named editions of the exact same bug-riddled trash we know and love. 365/Azure/fuckingentrawhat are barely usable. It’s almost like they specialize in UI synchronization bugs - but I remember this being a problem even with Windows 3.1.

        I realize this isn’t a particularly hot take on Lemmy, but let’s not pretend that all software is equally deficient - because there absolutely are better options.

    • no banana
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      167 months ago

      Ok but like as an immature idiot that’s my jam please keep the fart button team Google, but you should’ve kept the others too.

    • AWildMimicAppears
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      107 months ago

      I don’t understand why the US keeps allowing that. They should have learned that moving the production facilities to othercountries to reduce costs just lead to a massive job loss and brain drain in the manufacturing sector, now they allow the same to happen in the tech sector. It won’t be long until the US is a dried out husk of a country

      • @[email protected]
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        47 months ago

        Greed rules every sector of business Overarchingly so. No concern for anything except monetary profit.