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Some Engineers Are Turning Down Tech Recruiters in Silicon Valley Over Concerns About Corporate Value (ieee.org) 257

Tech companies such as Amazon, Facebook, Google, and Microsoft have faced growing internal unrest from employees who raise ethical concerns about how the companies deploy their high-tech services and products. That chorus of dissent is now growing louder as outside engineers voice their concerns to recruiters working for those tech companies. An anonymous reader shares a report: The protests of tech workers have proven persuasive because Silicon Valley firms compete fiercely to recruit and retain relatively scarce engineering talent. For example, Google's leadership sought to reassure employees by declaring it would not renew its Pentagon contract and by issuing a set of ethical principles for future uses of Google-developed technologies. By the same logic, engineers who are approached by tech recruiters also have leverage. "I might be a one-off example, but it could be different if Amazon gets a lot of people emailing them saying, 'Hey I won't work for you because of this,'" Geiduschek, a software engineer at Dropbox, who declined a job offer from Amazon, says.

Jackie Luo, a software engineer at Square, took a similar stance with a tech recruiter who sought to interest her in a career with Google. The recruiter happened to contact Luo when she was reading about Google's plans to re-enter the Chinese market with a censored version of the company's Internet search engine. [...] Individual engineers such as Luo and Geiduschek seem to be responding to tech recruiters through their own initiative rather than as part of any larger movement. Meanwhile, some tech employees have joined organized efforts, such as the #TechWontBuildIt movement spearheaded by the labor advocacy group Tech Workers Coalition.

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Some Engineers Are Turning Down Tech Recruiters in Silicon Valley Over Concerns About Corporate Value

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  • Amazon has it's 100 hours a week issues!

    • by RenderSeven ( 938535 ) on Friday August 10, 2018 @01:37PM (#57103200)
      I really liked working there, as did pretty much everyone else, and never saw anyone work a 100 hour week or even close. I only left because I found a much shorter commute. All the media coverage about how awful they are is I think completely blown out of proportion. Other than letting new hires show up to work in pajamas, it was a pretty cool place to work.
    • And dogs! I had a friend quit Amazon after getting bitten. Two other mutual friends quit there after getting frustrated with distractions due to dogs. Coworkers, meetings, and email are already distracting enough without adding dogs.

  • ...for every one person like that there are a thousand who would like to work for Google.
    • Re: (Score:2, Interesting)

      by Cederic ( 9623 )

      If they're white and male they have reasonable grounds for choosing a different employer.

      It doesn't hurt to let the recruiter know that - whether they're an agent or work for Google.

    • ...for every one person like that there are a thousand who would like to work for Google.

      They're mostly in India but yeah, I'm sure you're correct

    • by dgatwood ( 11270 )

      ...for every one person like that there are a thousand who would like to work for Google.

      And probably at least one who has a different opinion on whatever specific issue that person is complaining about. After all, although there are some moral absolutes, there are a lot more situations where different sets of morals conflict, such as the conflict between getting self-driving tech onto the roads sooner to save lives when drivers are half asleep versus delaying it until it is better than those drivers when

    • by arth1 ( 260657 )

      ...for every one person like that there are a thousand who would like to work for Google.

      "Would like to" does not equate "is an asset" or even "is qualified for".

      Having gone through my share of job interviews, I'd say it's fairly hard to find good fits, and job recruiters make this even more difficult with their keyword matching and not understanding even an iota about the skills required or offered. A reduction in the number of good applicants would be significant - the signal to noise ratio is already too low.

    • And that's in a good job market. Once the economy goes to hell again, people will be begging to go work for EvilCorp because they are desperate for a pay check.

  • Sounds about right (Score:4, Insightful)

    by mi ( 197448 ) <slashdot-2017q4@virtual-estates.net> on Friday August 10, 2018 @01:13PM (#57103060) Homepage Journal

    would not renew its Pentagon contract

    service used by U.S. government agents to target immigrants for detention and deportation

    Right... Because it is unethical for America — uniquely among the world's nations — to fight its enemies and enforce its borders.

    • Re: (Score:3, Funny)

      I was thinking it was due to Google being evil and tracking everyone and selling everyones data. Working for the Pentagon is probably the least evil thing that Google is doing.
    • by ranton ( 36917 )

      Right... Because it is unethical for America — uniquely among the world's nations — to fight its enemies and enforce its borders.

      While you likely already know this and are just trolling, no one disagrees with America fighting its enemies and enforcing its borders. There are those who disagree with the manner in which the US is currently doing it though.

      • by mi ( 197448 ) <slashdot-2017q4@virtual-estates.net> on Friday August 10, 2018 @01:45PM (#57103256) Homepage Journal

        There are those who disagree with the manner in which the US is currently doing it though.

        That's not, how TFA puts it, however. Simply targeting immigrants (the crucial adjective "illegal" coyly omitted) is enough to make it unethical in these people's imagination.

        These people are wrong, they should not be hired — much less glorified in media — and companies hiring them for any job paying above minimal wages should be boycotted.

        • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

          I didn't RTFA but I'm gonna guess it has something to do with the wall and children in cages.

          The idea that they are raging SJWs who object to all immigration control is just silly. Surely you don't actually believe that.

          • by mi ( 197448 )

            I didn't RTFA but I'm gonna guess it has something to do with the wall and children in cages.

            The "cages" are a product of feverish imagination. We are perfectly entitled to build a wall — nothing unethical about it.

            The idea that they are raging SJWs who object to all immigration control is just silly

            Abolish ICE [nytimes.com] is just that — because someone told them about the imaginary "children in cages", thousands of people call for the abolition of any and all efforts by the US to protect its borders. Comm [dsasantacruz.org]

      • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

        by kaoshin ( 110328 )
        What are you talking about? There have been vast numbers to disagree with America fighting enemies and enforcing its borders. American leftists have been demanding ends to conflicts and calling for "open borders" since what... the 1960s?
        • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

          No they haven't. They have been calling for fairer, more humane immigration and fewer dubious wars based on lies and corporate interests.

          Rather than lying about your opponents why not put forward your own ideas? What do you actually want to happen?

          • by kaoshin ( 110328 )

            Rather than forgetting about the last 50+ years, trying to pretend that radical leftists never existed and suggesting that all leftists share a common thread in being humane and honest, why don't you maybe get serious. How have democrats and socialists fixed immigration? Obama just had 8 years up at bat. Here's a tip. Socialism especially doesn't work with open borders. You can't tell everyone they are going to get "free" stuff and then let people flood in the door. If it was truly only about wanting

      • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

        by Anonymous Coward

        So Mexico has guards with machine guns with orders to fire on their southern border, but when the US treats illegals much nicer, somehow we're the bad guys?

    • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

      by b0s0z0ku ( 752509 )
      If we were fighting our enemies, we'd have blockaded Saudi Arabia's oil ports the week after 9/11. Follow the money.
      • by mi ( 197448 ) <slashdot-2017q4@virtual-estates.net> on Friday August 10, 2018 @01:51PM (#57103278) Homepage Journal

        Illegal immigrants — the overwhelmingly vast majority of them from South America — have killed far more Americans [npr.org] over the years, than the 3000 killed on the day of 9/11. By your logic — punishing the countries, whose expats have done us wrong — we should've overrun Mexico and proceeded further South by now.

        • by lgw ( 121541 ) on Friday August 10, 2018 @02:23PM (#57103544) Journal

          To his point, we don't because "follow the money". The US is run by a very big-corporate establishment that puppets most Dems and Republicans, and has a laser focus on "more labor supply = more profits", all across the economic spectrum from the illegal leaf picker to the H1-B with a PhD. Open borders directly drives concentration of wealth at the top.

        • ...we should've overrun Mexico and proceeded further South by now.

          I've heard that Texas has been considering this for YEARS.....

          They figure if they have to have the people, they might as well get the real estate that goes with them......

          ;)

        • by Dragonslicer ( 991472 ) on Friday August 10, 2018 @03:09PM (#57103872)

          Illegal immigrants — the overwhelmingly vast majority of them from South America...

          This page [migrationpolicy.org] lists all of South America at 6%. Mexico is 56%, which certainly isn't an "overwhelmingly vast majority", and Central America at 15%.

          ...have killed far more Americans [npr.org] over the years, than the 3000 killed on the day of 9/11.

          Is this the part of the article you're talking about? If so, I've highlighted a couple key points regarding the number.

          In the aggregate, Trump said, immigrants in the country illegally are responsible for tens of thousands of crimes. He pointed to a 2011 study by the Government Accountability Office which estimated undocumented immigrants had committed some 25,000 homicides, 42,000 robberies and nearly 70,000 sex offenses. That estimate was extrapolated from a survey of 1,000 undocumented immigrants held in state and federal prisons. It offered no time frame in which the crimes might have been committed and no basis for comparison with the native-born population.

          The article also cites a study that says that illegal immigrants in Texas were less likely to be convicted of homicide, sexual assault, or larceny than native citizens.

          • by mi ( 197448 )

            lists all of South America at 6%. Mexico is 56%,

            I apologize. I meant to say "Latin America". The rest of my comment hints at that — clearly, I included the Mexicans (North Americans).

            I've highlighted a couple key points regarding the number.

            The NPR article — and you — fight a strawman. Neither Trump, nor I claim, that the illegal immigrants are especially murderous. The claim is, they have committed numerous murders and other crimes — and the article confirms that.

            The article also c

        • have killed far more Americans over the years, than the 3000 killed on the day of 9/11.

          You're taking a bit of the article that quotes Trump's claims and are presenting them as facts. Here's what the article says:

          According to the study, immigrants in the country illegally were also 11.5 percent less likely than native-born Americans to be convicted of sexual assault and 79 percent less likely to be convicted of larceny.

          The study found higher conviction rates among illegal immigrants for gambling, kidnapping,

    • Even if you could trust America's commander-in-chief to deploy the military responsibly (and regardless which party you support, about 50% of the time you can't), it's naive to believe that autonomous killbots would not get out of control despite the best of intentions.
      • by mi ( 197448 )

        it's naive to believe that autonomous killbots would not get out of control

        Because you've seen happen in a movie?..

    • The US has a very strong border. There has been an effort to drive undocumented immigrants into dangerous desert crossings over the last few decades and it is working. It used to be a relatively safe crossing and now it's very dangerous, on purpose. We're not even letting many refugees into the US. We've outsourced ICE detention to private corporations whose profit motivation keeps their detention centers full. Obama deported more aliens than previous presidents, and Trump is prepared to break that rec

      • by mi ( 197448 )

        Anyone who thinks we have a weak border security is just naive.

        Whether this is true or not, it is irrelevant. We aren't discussing, whether America's efforts are sufficient. The article is about people claiming, such efforts are unethical — and, instead of denouncing them as saboteurs, celebrates such people as heroes.

    • Re: (Score:2, Interesting)

      by CronoCloud ( 590650 )

      I'm trying to remember if you're the one who is an expat from the former USSR. I get you confused with the other libertarian-right guys named Mashiki and Roman-Mir. Hmm, Mir is russian word...maybe he's another Randroid expat.

      Well if you are the expat, you might not be aware of the history behind immigration law in the US, which has at times been intentionally created with racist intent.

      For example, Northern Europe was favored over Southern Europe because the WASPS running the country didn't want more "be

    • by jopsen ( 885607 )

      Right... Because it is unethical for America — uniquely among the world's nations — to fight its enemies and enforce its borders.

      Is that what the US does? I think the problem is that "fight its enemies" is defined as drone striking suspects with limited evidence and civilian casualties, minimal accountability in a process that seems more like a global administrative execution program for people suspected or associated with anyone suspected of planning terrorism.

      If you want to defend your borders that's fine, but do it at the border. Fact is there are no existential threats to the US, no territorial threats, and none have been made

  • Can confirm (Score:3, Interesting)

    by theblkadder ( 671343 ) on Friday August 10, 2018 @01:17PM (#57103084)

    but it wasn't about that. Google contacted me and I told them that I wasn't seeing a cultural fit.

    I highly recommend reading the filings in the James Damore lawsuit: https://www.dhillonlaw.com/law... [dhillonlaw.com]

    You can see the statements from Googlers in their own words. To say that it's incredibly disturbing that they have created and promoted such a toxic work-place culture would be an understatement.

    Avoid like the plague unless you are a blue-haired harpy trying to work out her daddy issues by hating on men.

    • but it wasn't about that. Google contacted me and I told them that I wasn't seeing a cultural fit.

      I didn't tell them that, but concerns about the environment was among the reasons I declined.

    • unless you are a blue-haired harpy trying to work out her daddy issues

      Oh they're the ones with issues? Suuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuure.

  • by Golgafrinchan ( 777313 ) on Friday August 10, 2018 @01:17PM (#57103088)

    The subject's title is, "Engineers Say 'No Thanks' to Silicon Valley Recruiters, Citing Ethical Concerns." And then the article calls out 4 companies: Amazon, Google, Facebook, & Microsoft. 2 of those 4 are headquartered in the Seattle area, not Silicon Valley. How about some simple fact checking?

    • You're thinking in terms of headquarters. Microsoft and Amazon have offices and brick-and-mortar stores in Silicon Valley. Maybe you need to learn how to fact check?
    • Besides, they can always find work on the north end of the Cascades up in Vancouver BC, where ethical concerns are more highly prized.

      (caveat: I lived and graduated there, before coming here)

    • by Hadlock ( 143607 )

      All of these companies have offices in downtown SF. Google is in, or next to the same building (Hill Brothers Coffee building) as the Mozilla Corp on the Embarcadero with a fantabulous view of the bridge. I used to watch them take off drones from the roof of the building periodically. Microsoft is further in to Soma, nearer the caltrain station. I don't know where Apple's SF office is but besides marketing and advertising offices they have their own shuttles that go through the city. Amazon's A9 office is i

    • How many "Wall Street" firms are actually on Wall St. in NYC? Many but not all. Wall Street is a phrase for banks and stock traders. Similarly, "Silicon Valley" long ago moved from being strictly a physical denotation to also including a spiritual connotation for the core tech industry.
  • by Thelasko ( 1196535 ) on Friday August 10, 2018 @01:29PM (#57103154) Journal
    Did you become an engineer to get rich? Engineering pays quite well, but to get rich you're better off in finance.

    Most people become engineers to solve problems. To make life better for everyone. When corporate culture goes against that motive, engineers tend to rebel. This doesn't just apply to Silicon Valley.

    I'm intrigued that engineers in Silicon Valley feel they are empowered enough to make such demands. Most engineers just bitch to management about not doing what's in the customer's best interest and move on.
    • by ConceptJunkie ( 24823 ) on Friday August 10, 2018 @01:44PM (#57103250) Homepage Journal

      Engineering pays quite well, but to get rich you're better off being evil.

      FTFY.

      • by lgw ( 121541 ) on Friday August 10, 2018 @02:36PM (#57103650) Journal

        Very well put! Was trying to figure out how to say that ...

        Engineering is the best-paying job that doesn't require you to be a salesman, be overtly evil, or take significant physical risk. To be better paid as a doctor or lawyer or such, you have to start your own business - and while that's admittedly easier for doctors and dentists than for software devs, if you'd rather work for someone else then software is the place to be (most lawyers leave the field within 10 years because after that you're valued on the business you bring in as a partner - which is probably harder than making your own software company).

        Not everyone in finance does evil, of course, but it's a damn hard field to get rich in if you insist on morality.

    • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

      Silicon valley is a strange place.

      On the one hand engineers and can pick and choose. It's so bad that the big tech companies illegally colluded with a no-poaching agreement.

      Oh the other, unless you are Indian or a trans lesbian black woman it's impossible to get hired because of all the H1Bs and SJWs.

  • by sdinfoserv ( 1793266 ) on Friday August 10, 2018 @01:49PM (#57103272)
    I live in the Seattle area and know lots of current /former "Softies" and "Amazombies". Those large tech companies have huge turn over and incredible burn out rates Both companies threw out Stack ranking some years ago, https://whatis.techtarget.com/... [techtarget.com] but the mentality that put it in place is still ingrained in the corporate manta. Ie: "for you to get ahead, someone else must fail". It's the major reason pay is so high, you have to pay ridiculous money to keep good people.
  • After the toxic culture at Google came to light during the Damore incident, why would anyone want to join a company that boos you when you get hired if you're not a SJW darling? You may get paid well but there are so many non hostile workplaces that you would be much happier in. Do you really want to work at a place where people claim they sexually identify as an expansive ornate building [metro.co.uk], and your employer gives them a microphone?
    • Do you really want to work at a place where people claim they sexually identify as an expansive ornate building, and your employer gives them a microphone?

      Well, so says some guy who got pissy after getting fired for being a wanker. And microphone? Sounds like they let them post on forums.

      and if you don't like people being a bit strange on forums, then what the hell are you doing on the internet?

    • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

      How awful, being tolerant of people's sexual identities even when they seem strange to you. Wouldn't it be better if people felt too ashamed to be honest about such things? /sarcasm

  • by account_deleted ( 4530225 ) on Friday August 10, 2018 @01:55PM (#57103304)
    Comment removed based on user account deletion
  • Believe it or not... (Score:5, Interesting)

    by Comboman ( 895500 ) on Friday August 10, 2018 @02:00PM (#57103354)
    ...Once upon a time, the best and brightest of the engineering, math and science students didn't dream of working in Silicon Valley or Wall Street. They dreamed of NASA, JPL & NOAA. Academia and government service. The reward was working on interesting, important things rather than stock options and snack rooms. Maybe that thinking is starting to come back.
    • by Hadlock ( 143607 )

      Free snacks are pretty nice, not gonna lie. Couple bags of chips, beef jerky, cliff bars, etc, one of these in the afternoon does a great job of boosting your blood sugar to keep the sleepies off in the afternoon. I'd say I am 100% more productive after lunch if I have access to something to boost my blood sugar. Given local salaries vs cost of snacks ($100/wk for an office of 20?) seems like a slam dunk no-brainer from a business standpoint. Helps keep the entire department from taking a 1 hour coffee brea

    • by organgtool ( 966989 ) on Friday August 10, 2018 @03:38PM (#57104038)
      People stopped dreaming of working at those places because government budgets are shrinking, the work that's left goes to contracting companies that screw over their employees (no raises for many years and continually cutting benefits), and the contracts often require working on "tried and tested" technologies instead of exciting new tech. I don't necessarily disagree with that last point given that a lot of government systems are focused on safety but most people would rather work with cutting edge tech because it's more exciting and it increases their value in the marketplace.

      - Former government contractor
  • by Hadlock ( 143607 )

    Working as an engineer in the bay area I get unsolicited emails to my (relatively unpublished) personal email account directly by all sorts of companies, not to mention 10+ recruiter contacts a week via linkedin, etc.

    I don't hesitate to let them know if a particular republican venture capitalist that financially backed Trump's presidential campaign that has invested in their company, has turned me off from their company (pick one, there's a couple of high profile ones). Or if they're heavily in bed

  • by Qbertino ( 265505 ) <moiraNO@SPAMmodparlor.com> on Friday August 10, 2018 @02:36PM (#57103652)

    Unlike many others we, if we observe carefully, know exactly how and when we can be replaced. And when not. This gives us massive leverage and a few critical points. "I don't like your business model" is a very neat audible objection by someone who has a rare and demanded skill. Tech illuminates are in the sweet spot of being able to do a bit of a priests job in deciding who gets my skills and experience and who gets the finger.

    I like that we have some confident and self aware engineers. Keep it up!

  • It goes both ways. I believe in national defense, and in protecting our borders. I'd be happy to work for a defense-related company, or for a company with neutral politics.

    I wonder how many people would rather not work for companies whose management lobbies for liberal causes, and/or clearly prefers candidates who are not straight, white, conservative, and/or men.

  • by shaitand ( 626655 ) on Friday August 10, 2018 @06:21PM (#57104842) Journal
    I've argued we in the tech industry need to do it for a long time. It shouldn't look exactly like older professions like engineering, law, and medical because those industries are tied the established formal education. We have the power to ground airlines, shut down power grids, automate out co-workers, sell snake oil security, and skew research data. When we are faced with ethical dillemas we should know we can fall back on professional regulation to refuse on ethical grounds and our employers will lose a massive amount of face and business if they don't respect that.

    That said, this also remains one of the few knowledge industries where it is still possible for a highly intelligent individual and dedicated individual who is totally impoverished to avoid bias and debt in academia and to not only learn enough to practice but even become a leader in our field with nothing but a low end computer and an internet connection. We will never eliminate the advantages of being born to privilege but this has always been one field where the odds are more even for someone who is underprivileged but the merit and raw capacity that defines the right to be at the top.
  • by monkease ( 726622 ) on Friday August 10, 2018 @06:24PM (#57104848)

    "Some American Workers Try to Live Their Ethical Values"

    Regardless of whether or not you agree with those values--and from the modding it looks like a lot of people hovering around this article don't--it is newsworthy that some engineers are willing to turn down lucrative, prestigious jobs because the work they'd be doing, or the company they'd be doing it for, doesn't mesh with their sense of right and wrong.

    Of course, in a better world, this wouldn't be newsworthy at all.

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