We're not going to mince words here. Tech giants gave their employees a massive FU this past week, aggressively cutting down thousands of jobs and giving out corporate-y reasons for showing their employees the door.
Corporate America has been looking to
But what the internet giveth, it also taketh away. And so has been the case with tech companies, who are now looking to course correct by canning their workers.
Even though Microsoft is going to take a $1.2 billion charge because of the severance and other benefits it has to pay employees leaving the company, the job cuts will (presumably) free up cash in the long term for the Windows maker's current obsession: artificial intelligence.
Oh yes, Microsoft is betting hard on AI, going as far as to
In fact, Alphabet was the second tech titan this past week to note that it will be cutting jobs, surpassing even Microsoft's numbers. The creator of Google, and arguably the only reason why "SEO Specialists" are a thing, said it would be saying goodbye to 12,000 employees. "As an almost 25-year-old company, we’re bound to go through difficult economic cycles. These are important moments to sharpen our focus, reengineer our cost base, and direct our talent and capital to our highest priorities," CEO Sundar Pichai said in a
Not to be snubbed by Microsoft, Pichai also noted a focus on AI moving forward. "We have a substantial opportunity in front of us with AI across our products and are prepared to approach it boldly and responsibly." According to some media reports, the company is preparing for a major AI launch
Meanwhile, the cumulative effect of all these job cuts have been that the numbers of layoffs in the tech sector have peaked since 2002. According to outplacement firm Challenger, Gray & Christmas, tech companies eliminated 97,000 jobs in 2022 alone, the most since the dot-com crash of 2002 when the industry shed 131,000 jobs, Reuters
Google ranked #7 in this week's
If you thought that was the end of the layoffs news, we're sorry to tell you that there's still more.
The music streaming service (and home to
CEO Daniel Ek also said a reshuffle in the senior leadership, announced alongside the layoffs, will let him "get back to the part where I do my best work—spending more time working on the future of Spotify." We hope that the future does not involve further screwing over artists.
Meanwhile, Wikipedia co-founder Jimmy Wales' for-profit spinoff Fandom also announced layoffs at video gaming publication behemoths Giant Bomb and GameSpot, Kotaku
And so it happened. FTX, once the second-largest crypto exchange in the U.S., has detailed the extent of a crypto hack it reported at the time it was going bankrupt. According to Reuters, the crypto exchange pegged the value of the stolen crypto at
What's interesting about all of this is that, so far, nobody has batted an eye about the hack, or at least not as much as we thought everyone would. It feels like the stealing of crypto and related funds via a hack is the least of anyone's problems, given the colossal f*ck up that was FTX.
And that's a wrap! There's still time for you to
See y'all next week. PEACE! ☮️