• @EdibleFriend@lemmy.world
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    5 months ago

    Doesn’t even question what employees are possibly doing. Just says there are too many and they must be put out on the street. Says the people who are left are making too much money.

    I say this a lot but…seriously…when do we start burning things?

    • Neuromancer
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      1415 months ago

      Hedge fund. He doesn’t care about the employees or the company. Just the money he can make trading the stock.

        • Neuromancer
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          5 months ago

          I don’t have a problem with people who create value and become wealthy. They earned it and created good jobs, more power to them.

          Hedge funds, most Private equity, etc can go fuck themselves. They strip wealth and destroy things.

          • @AllonzeeLV@lemmy.world
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            5 months ago

            I’m not for people only interested in benefiting themselves being the ones rewarded most by society, let alone being the ones effectively in charge of society as they are.

            It isn’t heroic, benevolent, or even minimally pro-social to spend your life trying to accrue private profit for the sake of private profit. It just makes you greedy and selfish. Or as they call it with their orwellian language manipulation, “rational self-interest.” being greedy, selfish, and unconcerned with the effects your actions have on others makes you a vile, broken, contemptible person, and humanity seems to have forgotten that entirely, or at least we’ve been propagandized to forget it by the owner class.

            We punish people that dare to pursue vocations that benefit society, like teachers and paramedics, and reward selfishness.

            I can’t root for my own species in this state. Slitting eachother’s throats when there’s another dollar to be had by it. If this is truly what our species has chosen as it’s most practiced purpose and meaning, I want no part of it, and I will be grateful when it’s time to leave it.

          • Neato
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            245 months ago

            No one creates wealth alone. When one becomes that rich, they’ve stolen it.

      • @instamat@lemmy.world
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        255 months ago

        Notice also how he starts each paragraph with “I” and not to be an armchair psychiatrist but that says a lot about his motivation.

      • Kalkaline
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        175 months ago

        I want to make money off of Google stock too, but I also want their shit to work so I can make more money in the future.

        • AnonTwo
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          235 months ago

          I mean if he catches wind their products stop working to the point consumers react, he can just sell his stock and move on to destroy another company.

        • Neuromancer
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          85 months ago

          I own a little Google stock. I don’t mind they pay their employees a shit ton. I want them make good products. I’m not a fan of most their products but that’s just me

          • Pepsi
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            05 months ago

            lol sorry to break it to you but a few bucks in fractional shares doesn’t count as “owning a little stock”

            🤣

            • Neuromancer
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              25 months ago

              I own about 250k of Google stock. So a little bit. I don’t own more because I don’t like that you are the product.

      • Ænima
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        115 months ago

        So what you’re saying is we start the burning with him?

    • @AllonzeeLV@lemmy.world
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      5 months ago

      My hatred of the owner class is matched only by my disappointment in my fellow humans for not only taking it, but often defending it.

      The people we struggle for have abandoned their humanity. That’s what it takes to be one of society’s supposed winners or be in their good graces: practiced sociopathy.

      And half of the peasants fantasize about being the sociopaths instead of ending their reign and this despicable con game of an economy.

      • @setInner234@lemmy.world
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        5 months ago

        Summed up concisely. I’ve unfortunately given up hope that anything can be done or can improve. It feels the fight, whatever fight there ever was, has been lost.

        • Norah - She/They
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          35 months ago

          Fuck that. I will not go gently into that good night. I will rage against the dying of the light.

          • @setInner234@lemmy.world
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            15 months ago

            Same boat club.

            Honestly I’ve reached the point that I hope climate change, that’s presently accelerating, fucks our species shit up to the core and forces our species to start again, because existing like this, subsisting for a tiny group of proud monsters that see us as livestock in perpetuity, sounds like most people will be born into damnation going forward, and as much pain as civilization level collapse would be, it pales in comparison to this system persisting and finding new cruelties to profit from for generations.

            Human civilization in its current form seems to exist to find new efficiencies with which to torture most of humanity. Maybe we’d be better off knocked back to depending on one another in smaller groups. Maybe we’d find empathy again. Maybe our planet could start to recover from our damage

            Yeah, you’re not alone. I’ve basically become an anti-natalist. I don’t think the ruling / owning class will budge unless their lives are affected. And that won’t happen until there’s no more slaves to support their insane lifestyles.

    • lobotomo
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      415 months ago

      I’m genuinely not super revolutionary but I didn’t get halfway through this letter before coming to the realization that this person needed to not exist anymore and same for anybody else of the same ilk.

          • @CallumWells@lemmy.ml
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            25 months ago

            Holy hell, if some fairly rational person got such a book and did their research on who needs to be written down the world would probably look a lot different in a short amount of time.

    • @CarbonIceDragon@pawb.social
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      205 months ago

      Yeah, I’m not sure I really get this whole “reduce employment” logic. Like if some product just isn’t profitable and you lay off the employees you hired to work on it, that’s not surprising, but if the employees are doing something profitable, and you actually needed to hire that many to get whatever it was you hired them for done, shouldn’t it be more profitable to a company to keep them, even if one had a large number?

      • @AllonzeeLV@lemmy.world
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        5 months ago

        Moreover, if all the oligarchs are doing it, and they are, who will be left to buy their products/services?

        They’re breaking their own ponzi scheme economy for a few more quarterly profit boosts because there’s nowhere else to grow/metastasize. Media companies are making less media. Food makers are making less product types. Their profit is coming out of gutting workers and their ability to produce what their economic sector produced in the first place.

        This is a terminal stage market capitalism fire sale. The snake is eating its own tail having conquered the board.

        • @Sanctus@lemmy.world
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          155 months ago

          Because this is the End of the Line. The snake has found its tail and Oroborous awakens to transform the end into the beginning. An ideology of everlasting consumption will eventually consume itself.

            • snooggums
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              65 months ago

              Bold of you to assume the stock market has anything to do with finite resources.

              When the ultra wealthy and their companies run the system into the ground they will buy up the failed stocks and cheap land that nobody else can afford then come out ahead when the economy recovers like they have in the previous economic crashes. They can afford to buy low and cash out when it is high because they have zero pressure to act at any given point in time due to their ridiculous wealth and zero legal repercussions.

              • @HakFoo@lemmy.sdf.org
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                95 months ago

                But even then there reaches a point where they run out of things to buy, and people to buy them from.

                Eventually they poison the one thing they worship: the sanctity of private property rights. It has to serve at least some portion of the populace if it’s going to remain tenable, but they’re doomed to discover and undershoot that number.

                The Western world spent a century demonising socialism with “they’ll take your home and car” but it rings hollow when you have neither.

                • @Sanctus@lemmy.world
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                  15 months ago

                  I cannot afford an emergency. Bring in the socialist, if it is houses they take, and cars they enamor, surely they will leave me be.

                • snooggums
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                  15 months ago

                  Upthread:

                  This is a terminal stage market capitalism fire sale. The snake is eating its own tail having conquered the board.

      • Neuromancer
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        75 months ago

        Most of them are not. That’s the beauty of a cash cow like Google. They’re working on things that may be profitable in the future. By cutting the future, you’re cutting future growth.
        It’s why I dislike hedge funds. They’re stripping value instead of creating value.

    • @cultsuperstar@lemmy.world
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      95 months ago

      Because he doesn’t care. He’s looking out for himself.

      “Hey Googs, you have too many employees and that’s cutting in my investments. Shitcan 150,000 so my investments go up and I make more billions kthxbye”

    • @marcos@lemmy.world
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      5 months ago

      The funny thing is… what are the operational requirements of an R&D organization?

      As far as I can see, it’s nothing, by definition.

      Anyway, does the rich person there not understand that? Also, what is the value of an R&D organization where people are demotivated?

    • @Szymon@lemmy.ca
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      15 months ago

      Don’t need to burn things, the letter is already addressed by that which needs to be burned.

  • @AllonzeeLV@lemmy.world
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    5 months ago

    Our civilization rewards behavior like this, while literally punishing pro-social behavior like teaching.

    Think about what that says about humanity. Our values are wrong and our entire species strives to elevate practicing sociopaths.

    • @floofloof@lemmy.ca
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      245 months ago

      Our values are wrong and our entire species strives to elevate practicing sociopaths.

      Not our entire species. Only the fans of capitalism. Unfortunately a few of them are quite powerful.

      • @AllonzeeLV@lemmy.world
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        5 months ago

        Most of us without meaningful capital are either forced to do it in practice with our labor, or be cast out to serve the owners in another way: as capitalist scarecrows. Our homeless exist on purpose, it wouldn’t be that expensive to provide minimal shelter. They exist to die slowly and publicly of exposure, and constant police capital defense force harassment, to terrify the capital batteries into continuing to show up to their jobs to produce value for their owners.

        One way or another, those without capital are forced to serve the owners. Nothing “voluntary” about modern market capitalism, short of slitting one’s own throat.

        You will serve the owner’s insatiable greed directly, or you will serve as an example and threat to the others.

        • BaldProphet
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          195 months ago

          Our homeless exist on purpose, it wouldn’t be that expensive to provide minimal shelter.

          This is literally the truth. The state of California spent billions on serving the homeless over the past several years, and studies found that it would have been cheaper to simply pay their rent. At market rates.

          • @AllonzeeLV@lemmy.world
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            5 months ago

            “But I go to work so it isn’t faiiiiiiir if they don’t die in the gutter!”

            -Someone struggling to make rent/mortgage, and having 95% of the value they produce extracted to run up the ego scores of our con-men owners.

            They propagandize us through the media they own, and the curriculum they influence, to look down and to the side for who to blame, because our benevolent job creators would never work against us, would they? It’s in-fucking-sane.

            🤮

            • BaldProphet
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              105 months ago

              It’s ironic because the cost of labor would be cheaper if the economic conditions that cause homelessness didn’t exist. I wouldn’t have to demand a six-digit salary if I could maintain my standard of living on five digits.

    • @LeroyJenkins@lemmy.world
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      115 months ago

      our society just rewards capitalism. it’s a simple economics problem, really. same product being made with fewer people to pay means company stock value goes up. if we really want to change, we need to flip that model over or heavily regulate it. things like increased hiring, pay raises, and societal contribution should be things that dictate the worth of a company to society, but we don’t speculate on stocks based on non monetary things like that. we just care about the bottom line at the end of the day…

  • Lenny
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    925 months ago

    This guy needs to win an all expenses paid trip to view the Titanic.

    • @techt@lemmy.world
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      615 months ago

      He’s saying lay off to 150k, not by 150k. He says getting down to that would be a 20% reduction, so that puts the then-current headcount at ~188k, so get rid of about 35-40k people.

        • @techt@lemmy.world
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          445 months ago

          35k is a pretty huge amount better than 150k. Are you just trying to say that it sucks either way? Because that I agree with, but when we criticize things, we should at least have the numbers right.

          • AwkwardLookMonkeyPuppet
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            255 months ago

            Yes, I’m saying he’s a psychopath regardless of the numerical error. He’s talking about destroying the livelihood of tens of thousands of people, just so he can make some more money he doesn’t need, and could never spend. So it doesn’t really matter if it’s 30k, 40k, or 150k. He would propose anything that benefits him personally, regardless of the suffering it causes.

              • Pup Biru
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                95 months ago

                the tech sector is in a bit of a jam right now…it’s actually pretty hard to find work

                • @afraid_of_zombies@lemmy.world
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                  25 months ago

                  Kinda glad I work in government/heavy industry. The highs aren’t very high and the lows aren’t very low. I will never be rich but I also will never be unemployed for over a week by choice.

          • AwkwardLookMonkeyPuppet
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            185 months ago

            I’m saying his complete disregard for these employees as people, with families, and lives, is unaffected by the difference. He’s proposing to fire 30,000+ people so that a number in his portfolio can grow. A number that he doesn’t need, and will never spend. He’s a fucking psychopath, regardless of it being 30k, 40k, or 150k.

    • AlexisFR
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      -65 months ago

      But he’s still correct. Having too many people on way too inflated salaries isn’t good business sense. Over hiring can hurt people’s careers, too.

      • @EnderMB@lemmy.world
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        55 months ago

        I work in tech.

        The average time a software engineer, regardless of level, stays at a big tech company is around 18-24 months. That, surprisingly, hasn’t changed with the market slowing. Many are still taking jobs at a higher level at smaller companies, or leaving to do other things.

        Given the severance paid out for many of these employees, alongside the operational damage caused, it’s likely that the people they laid off or forced out would have already left for another role. Funny enough, many of the companies that laid thousands of people off are still hiring external candidates, or people on boomerang deals to return to the company after 6-12 months.

        It was always a short-sighted move, triggered by everyone else doing the same thing. While you’re not wrong, I don’t have enough faith in these companies to run things for the benefit of their current employees.

  • @iAvicenna@lemmy.world
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    5 months ago

    I read his wikipedia article and I must say I was somewhat confused. He does not eat meat, he advocates urgent action on the climate crisis and has given over billions to children’s investment f (don’t know if this is a good charity or not). And yet he is an asshole enough to ask a company to fire tens of thousands of employees so his investments are more profitable on short term. It is entirely possible that he does not eat meat because he thinks that it is healthier and would make him live longer (typical billionaire). Moreover he was directly affiliated to the mentioned children’s charity through his wife so god knows what is really going on in there. Also after their divorce his fund is no longer contractually tied to the foundation so don’t know if he is regularly donating some parts of his profit there anymore.

    • Supercritical
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      165 months ago

      He does not eat meat, he advocates urgent action on the climate crisis and has given over billions to children’s investment f (don’t know if this is a good charity or not).

      None of these make you a good person. You can do all these things, believe in them, and still be a bad person.

      • @iAvicenna@lemmy.world
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        15 months ago

        Could be, I would still be interested to know however why an emotionless asshole would be doing these. Does he still feel the need to repent or want to feel morally superior to your average asshole rich person? Or does he just use them as a facade to prevent being blamed as %100 narcissistic sociopath? Or maybe humans are complicated enough that they can spiritually melt firing tens of thousands of people for profit and climate/environment activism in the same pot and don’t feel contradicted about it.

        • Supercritical
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          15 months ago

          I don’t think it’s that deep, personally. I truly believe someone can analyze their behavior, like eating meat for example, and have moral or health-related objections. This in no way means they aren’t a rich asshole billionaire. At the end of the day, he’s watching his bottom dollar as an investor. I’m sure everything comes second to that for him.

    • @ikidd@lemmy.world
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      135 months ago

      You can put whatever you want on Wikipedia. You don’t think PR firms have longterm Wikipedia editors on retainer for this sort of thing?

      • @iAvicenna@lemmy.world
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        5 months ago

        Yea, I am sure that happens all the time but I don’t really wanna dismiss a piece of information without any further evidence just because of my priors. That is why I posted it here to see if anyone has seen other stuff about this charity which I have heard for the first time.

    • monk
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      45 months ago

      You’re so desperate to think in black and white, it hurts to read the result.

        • @warbond@lemmy.world
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          -65 months ago

          I think the sentiment is that despite any charity or goodwill, he has no reservations in stepping on people in the name of profit. Starting from the position of billionaire = evil, any attempt at explanation becomes an indefensible justification.

          • @iAvicenna@lemmy.world
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            I wouldn’t generally trust a billionaire to make the humane decision for anything but that is not why I was surprised here. My starting position here is him asking a company to fire tens of thousands of people and lower the pay of more for a more profitable short term investment. I do believe that most people are selfish to some extent but I think people like this are more selfish and hence why my attempt to explain his seemingly more charitable acts from a selfish point of view.

            Additionally, I think these people have so much drive to achieve power, it becomes aggressive to the rest of humanity at that point. Sort of “directly and consciously hoarding water for personal gains and comfort during a horrible draught” kind of aggressiveness.

            • @wearling0600@lemmy.world
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              65 months ago

              He sounds similar to those insufferable effective altruists. Most of these people have a genuine skill in something narrow, and the willingness to walk all over everyone in pursuit of the ‘highest score’ achievement on their ‘net worth’.

              Yet they’ve convinced themselves that only they can save the world, so they have to make as much money as possible by any means necessary in order to fund misguided charities. They’ll burn down the planet and anyone necessary to make money so they can save it.

              Sir Chris is still in control of his charity, so really all that money he gave them is still in pursuit of his own goals, the charity is only spending money it makes through its investments. So whilst it sounds so generous to donate billions to charity and I’m sure it brought him great publicity, it’s little more than a tax-efficient way to attempt to bring about societal changes that society didn’t ask for.

              I’m sure it was also nice that whilst he ‘donated’ billions to the charity, when it came to his divorce settlement, that was taken out of his ‘personal fortune’ which amounted to less than a billion.

              So don’t give him that much credit.

    • @Chestnut@lemmy.world
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      -15 months ago

      he thinks that it is healthier and would make him live longer (typical billionaire)

      I’m pretty sure there are a lot of people who aren’t billionaires who do this. I’m not sure “wanting to live longer” is necessarily a billionaire exclusive trait

      • @iAvicenna@lemmy.world
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        145 months ago

        Yea for sure but I think you miss my point. I am wondering whether if he is a vegetarian because he cares about the environment and animals or just because he thinks it is healthier.

  • @knotthatone@lemmy.one
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    445 months ago

    Oh, I very much doubt that he’s the only billionaire who’s written a letter like this to Google in the past year.

    • @jonne
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      355 months ago

      They’ve written one like that to every tech company. It’s probably just so they can repeat the conditions from before they got sued for colluding to depress employee wages. This has the same effect, except this time it’s not collusion, it’s doing their fiduciary duty because shareholders are demanding it.

      • peopleproblems
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        135 months ago

        the “fiduciary duty” isn’t a real thing.

        they can fire and change who governs the board by using their majority share holder votes (which has been selecting short term max profit guys) but it’s a myth that they have a legal responsibility to return anything to shareholders

  • @frank@lemmy.world
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    425 months ago

    TL; DR We’re making a lot of money, but we could be making more if we fuck over 120,000 people that built the thing that is making money.

    • @Evil_Shrubbery@lemm.ee
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      … and lets say reduce for about a 100.00% … this marginal, poor, repressed, scrutinized group of (technically) people need to be put helped out of their misery, it’s the humane & eco-friendly thing to do.

    • @Esqplorer@lemmy.zip
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      35 months ago

      He’s just a finance guy. They don’t understand maintenance & ongoing operations/support of software can take nearly as many people as development. They hear “pRoJeCT dOnE” and wonder what those employees are working on after launch.

  • Jo Miran
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    355 months ago

    I think the comments are cutting Alphabet too much slack. Yes the billionaire is heartless, but he isn’t wrong. Alphabet was careless. They binged on talent because they did not, and do not, place significant weight on the consequences of their hubris. Why? Because ultimately it is the workers that have to pay the price, not the executives that hired carelessly. If you do not force management to care, they won’t.

    I always think of Indeed and their CEO. They too hired too many too quickly and were forced to fire. What did the CEO do? Not only did the company make sure the severance package was generous, the CEO took a pay cut too.

  • @Goodie@lemmy.world
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    265 months ago

    If he thought $300,000 was a lot, wait until tech workers start avoiding his company (aka the Meta tax).

    Or maybe workers wont give a fuck and will just take whatever job is in front of them.

  • @Emerald@lemmy.world
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    5 months ago

    Image Transcription: Text


    Dear Sundar,

    I have appreciated our recent dialogue concerning Alphabet’s cost base. I am encouraged to see that you are now taking some action to right size Alphabet’s cost base and understand that it is never an easy decision to let people go.

    I argued in my previous letter that Alphabet’s headcount has grown beyond what is required operationally. Over the last 5 years, Alphabet more than doubled its headcount, adding over 100,000 employees, of which over 30,000 were added in the first 9 months of 2022 alone. The decision to cut 12,000 jobs is a step in the right direction, but it does not even reverse the very strong headcount growth of 2022. Ultimately management will need to go further.

    I believe that management should aim to reduce headcount to around 150,000, which is in line with Alphabet’s headcount at the end of 2021. This would require a total headcount reduction in the order of 20%.

    Importantly, management should also take the opportunity to address excessive employee compensation. The median salary at Alphabet in 2021 amounted to nearly $300,000, and the average salary is much higher. Competition for talent in the technology industry has fallen significantly allowing Alphabet to materially reduce compensation per employee. In particular, Alphabet should limit stock-based compensation given the depressed share price.

    I hope to have further dialogue with you on these matters in due course.

    Yours sincerely

    [Signature]

    Christopher Hohn

      • @JasonDJ@lemmy.zip
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        Some people transcribe posts on the internet as a matter of public service.

        A picture of text is not particularly accessible to the blind. But written text, well they can zoom that significantly without reducing clarity, if they have some vision…or they can use any text-to-speech tool.

        I don’t know a lot of poorly sighted people though. I’m assuming that they have some sort of font packages they use that scale well to large sizes for increased legibility, just like there are fonts specifically to help with dyslexia.