Zachary Boullt is a student at Harvard Law School.
A group of quality assurance testers and developers at Activision Blizzard studio Raven Software, responsible for Call of Duty: Warzone, have staged a walkout over terminated testers. This is the third recent worker action at Activision Blizzard. The demonstrating employees have demanded that all quality assurance testers, including those laid off, receive full-time position offers. So far 30% of the testers have had their contracts terminated, right after testers have engaged in five weeks of overtime. All of those terminated were in good standing with the company. The demonstrating employees protested that some of the employees terminated had relocated to Wisconsin without assistance from Activision Blizzard anticipating a return to in-person work. According to Ethan Gach of Kotaku, quality assurance testers are among the most exploited workers in game development.
Activision Blizzard is not the only company under fire for layoffs. Better.com, a fintech mortgage company that just received $750 million in financing to go public, announced over Zoom that it was laying off more than 900 employees before the holidays. While CEO Vishal Garg claimed the layoffs were for market efficiency and productivity reasons, Fortune has reported that Garg said the employees were stealing from colleagues and customers by being unproductive and working short hours. Garg was criticized last year for sending a staff email referring to employees as “TOO DAMN SLOW” and “a bunch of DUMB DOLPHINS,” further claiming that employees were embarrassing him. Included in the layoffs was the diversity, equity, and inclusion recruiting team.
Following a wave of coffee shop unionizations in the greater Boston area, employees at three Somerville coffee shops have requested voluntary recognition from management to unionize with the New England Joint Board UNITE HERE union. The employees at Diesel Café, Bloc Café, and Forge Baking Company, which share management, are seeking structural changes such as better frameworks for raises, sick leave, time off, and management communication. The organizing committee represents about fifty employees across the shops.
A group of unions have called on the Federal Trade Commission to use antitrust laws against companies such as Google, Amazon, and Uber that are weakening worker competitive power. Targeted practices include worker misclassification, widespread use of temporary workers, and arbitration agreements. Speakers at a joint workshop between the unions, the Justice Department, and the FTC included the Teamsters, SEIU, and the CWA. The union speakers emphasized that the proliferation of worker classifications meant to avoid unionization is unjustifiable anti-competitive behavior and that the FTC should address the “fissured workplace.”
Daily News & Commentary
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February 24
In today’s news and commentary, the NLRB uses the Obama-era Browning-Ferris standard, a fired National Park ranger sues the Department of Interior and the National Park Service, the NLRB closes out Amazon’s labor dispute on Staten Island, and OIRA signals changes to the Biden-era independent contractor rule. The NLRB ruled that Browning-Ferris Industries jointly employed […]
February 23
In today’s news and commentary, the Trump administration proposes a rule limiting employment authorization for asylum seekers and Matt Bruenig introduces a new LLM tool analyzing employer rules under Stericycle. Law360 reports that the Trump administration proposed a rule on Friday that would change the employment authorization process for asylum seekers. Under the proposed rule, […]
February 22
A petition for certiorari in Bivens v. Zep, New York nurses end their historic six-week-strike, and Professor Block argues for just cause protections in New York City.
February 20
An analysis of the Board's decisions since regaining a quorum; 5th Circuit dissent criticizes Wright Line, Thryv.
February 19
Union membership increases slightly; Washington farmworker bill fails to make it out of committee; and unions in Argentina are on strike protesting President Milei’s labor reform bill.
February 18
A ruling against forced labor in CO prisons; business coalition lacks standing to challenge captive audience ban; labor unions to participate in rent strike in MN