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Google Will End Forced Arbitration For Employees (cnet.com) 42

Google said it will no longer require current and future staff to go through mandatory arbitration for disputes with the company. "The change goes into effect on March 21," reports CNET. "The search giant will also remove mandatory arbitration from its own employment agreements with contract and temporary staff, though the change won't impact staffing firms." From the report: This comes after Google employees in November walked out of their offices to protest the company's handling of sexual harassment claims. One of their demands was to end forced arbitration in cases of sexual harassment and discrimination. In January, some Google employees launched a social media campaign to pressure the company and other tech companies to drop mandatory arbitration. Mandatory arbitration often means workers can't take their employers to court when they complain internally. The campaign organizers said 60 million Americans are affected by forced arbitration.
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Google Will End Forced Arbitration For Employees

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  • Free at last!! (Score:5, Insightful)

    by youngone ( 975102 ) on Thursday February 21, 2019 @09:39PM (#58161484)
    Why would forced arbitration even be legal?
    • Re:Free at last!! (Score:4, Informative)

      by Anonymous Coward on Thursday February 21, 2019 @09:49PM (#58161506)

      The Supreme Court has over the past 15 years built up a line of cases establishing that arbitration clauses in employment and other contracts are enforceable. While usually couched in freedom of contract terms, much of the impetus is to try to decrease the workload on the overburdened federal court system.

    • by AHuxley ( 892839 )
      When a person accepts work for an ad company, they work as the ad company expects.
      • When a person accepts work for an ad company, they work as the ad company expects.

        The power relationship between employer and employee is not symmetrical, so employment contracts should not be "anything goes".

        Nevertheless, arbitration is a more accessible and far less expensive option for most disputes. The "right to sue" is overrated.

        • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

          by Anonymous Coward

          The "right to sue" is overrated.

          Well, the nice thing about suing is that your case is heard by a judge or jury who ostensibly have no vested interest in the outcome.

          Compare this with professional arbitration firms WHO RELY ON CORPORATIONS FOR REPEAT BUSINESS. Note that this is why the results of arbitration are contractually kept secret. If the world knew how lopsided the verdicts are then mandatory binding arbitration would become politically untenable.

          Arbitration is so hopelessly rigged that it only exist

          • by Anonymous Coward

            Especially when most of the arbiters worked as attorneys defending large crops from employement lawsuits.

            Itâ(TM)s completely rigged and shameful.

        • the right to sue is the ONLY power 'small guys' have.

          remove that and you make us slaves. ...which is what we all CURRENTLY are, truth be told.

          this is long overdue. companies have WAY too much power and this has been hurting america for decades.

          companies exist for PEOPLE. its not the other way around. time to reverse 'backward land'.

    • Re:Free at last!! (Score:5, Interesting)

      by bill_mcgonigle ( 4333 ) * on Thursday February 21, 2019 @10:54PM (#58161706) Homepage Journal

      Why would forced arbitration even be legal?

      It's not forced, it's agreed upon contractually.

      And, why? Because courts are only slightly better than spinning a roulette wheel because they face no competitive pressure to improve, ever, being a monopoly.

      What they should have done here - and every REAL mutual contract does this - is to give the employees a choice of a dozen different arbiters that Google feels are fair players, and let those arbiters fight it out for employee preference by competing on the most fair dealings for employees, and let them pick a new one every n months.

      When you have mutually-agreed-upon arbiters then you have a real contract. If people are signing employment contracts without ever having qualified their potential arbiter ahead of time, then due diligence cannot be said to have taken place. But many employees would rather be treated like children than do that kind of research, so perhaps even at Google it's unlikely. We can't have nice things without humans accepting adult responsibility for themselves.

      • by rsilvergun ( 571051 ) on Thursday February 21, 2019 @11:53PM (#58161850)
        then yeah, it's forced. Especially when nearly all employers do it. Google's one of the top employers so good luck getting a job with them to escape forced arbitration.

        And this begs the question, should you be able to sell yourself into slavery then? If you're willing to say yes then at least your consistent, though on some level you must realize that if you're selling yourself into slavery then you're not in a position to make fair contracts. Anymore than a child would be.
        • by Waccoon ( 1186667 ) on Friday February 22, 2019 @02:58AM (#58162378)

          But... but... you can still work for an employer who doesn't do this stuff. The free market will take care of itself. Honest!

          It's shocking how hard it is to find a EULA that doesn't have a binding arbitration cause. It only took a few years for everyone to start doing it.

        • Slavery? Wow. You really have no idea what slavery is, do you? Slaves couldn't leave their employers and take reduced wage but with better rights somewhere else.

          Why don't you compare it to rape next?

          • I said that from the GP's argument that any contract two people enter into is valid that it naturally follows that slavery contracts should be allowed.

            The Strawman in your argument is that I've said employment is exactly equal to slavery.

            At the moment it's not, but it has been in the past. [wikipedia.org] As for Rape, same deal. It wasn't too long ago that women were forced into "Marriage" on a routine basis.

            Basically, everything is just a matter of degree. At the moment very few people are coerced to the extre
            • My children are black and we've been spending a lot of time this month talking about black history.

              With that and all the issues going on nowadays I think it's important not to weaken that meaning and histrionically context of that word.

              That said, I'm not trying to forbid you from using it, just pointing out that overuse of a word particularity in a less offensive context can reduce the impact of the word.

      • Re:Free at last!! (Score:5, Insightful)

        by gumpish ( 682245 ) on Friday February 22, 2019 @01:51AM (#58162150) Journal

        give the employees a choice of a dozen different arbiters that Google feels are fair players, and let those arbiters fight it out for employee preference by competing on the most fair dealings for employees

        Why would it be in a business's interest to use fair arbiters?
        Why would arbiters, who rely on corporate defendants (not aggrieved individuals) for repeat business, be motivated to render fair findings rather than findings which favor the company?
        Why do nearly all contracts which require mandatory binding arbitration also specify that the results of arbitration must remain secret?
        As much as you hate the idea, governments have a larger role to play than simply providing for the national defense.

      • Re:Free at last!! (Score:4, Insightful)

        by nzkbuk ( 773506 ) on Friday February 22, 2019 @06:08AM (#58162760)

        It's not forced, it's agreed upon contractually.

        In all practical effects most contract negotiations boil down to If you want a job with us you will sign our employment contract, we will not enter into negotiation If that's not effectively the same as "forced" I don't know what is.
        The exception to the above rule tends to be at C level.

    • usually for social issues like Abortion or "Tough on Crime" candidates. So economic policy (which make no mistake, that's what this is) falls by the wayside.

      Also, Google has a _lot_ of contractors, and I suspect they're not affected by this. That's the point of hiring contractors after all, it lets you do all the terrible things to employees you want while publicly saying you don't do that.
    • Because harming the interests of workers is how we keep the deplorables in line. You're not on their side, are you?
  • So it doesn't matter. They have more money than God which makes them satan incarnate. Even worse.

  • Good. (Score:4, Informative)

    by BcNexus ( 826974 ) on Thursday February 21, 2019 @10:46PM (#58161684)

    This is good. To quote another slashdot user named bluefoxlucid:

    Arbitration is an ineffective and inefficient method of encouraging or enforcing fair and ethical business behavior.

    Lawsuits allow employees and consumers to sanction a business, to hold a legal threat over its head if it acts in a way legally liable in a civil context. It's the stick that comes behind the carrot in encouraging ethical business. Without a class-action suit, each individual employee or customer must take their own time, money, and risk to address these behaviors--which means fewer individuals will achieve representation, and so the risk of harm to a business for acting in an unethical manner harmful to its employees or customers is fractional. Even if all all employees or customers did come to self-represent, they would sink an enormous amount of time and effort into seeking redress, instead of into any more-useful pursuit.

    • Re:Good. (Score:4, Insightful)

      by Waccoon ( 1186667 ) on Friday February 22, 2019 @02:55AM (#58162372)

      Of course corporations should have a monopoly on efficiency and strength in numbers. We can't have the commoners using the same techniques as a business to make their causes practical or even viable.

      Even back in the 90's, I remember each employer showing me anti-union videotapes as a standard hiring procedure. I never thought I'd see the day when arbitration became widely tolerated, let alone people believing that unions are universally bad.

      • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

        let alone people believing that unions are universally bad.
        big religion gives a side-channel to peoples' brains.

        they get brainwashed by their churches (mostly republican based) and they vote against their own best interestes.

        the R's are masters at this. evil as all fuck, but masters nonetheless.

        unions are a balance of power. but the R's (that have a policy of being entirely pro-business and anti-consumer) convince their base that allowing unions is somehow 'anti american' and jesus will punish you for th

  • In a nutshell, arbitration is an effort to strip a person of their rights, as well as circumvent the court system, and our laws, in general. Arbitration is subversive to our laws and moral standards.

The most exciting phrase to hear in science, the one that heralds new discoveries, is not "Eureka!" (I found it!) but "That's funny ..." -- Isaac Asimov

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