cross-posted from: https://lemmy.ca/post/5340114

ghostarchive
Original Discussion[1]

San Francisco police told Polygon that officers responded to Unity’s San Francisco office “regarding a threats incident.” A “reporting party” told police that “an employee made a threat towards his employer using social media.” The employee that made the threat works in an office outside of California, according to the police statement.


  1. https://lemmy.world/post/5057297 ↩︎

    • Jaysyn@kbin.social
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      1 year ago

      Even better than fake, it’s self-inflicted.

      The fact that Unity board of directors haven’t fired the CEO shows that they are A-OK with this.

      • Dettweiler@lemmyonline.com
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        1 year ago

        This is the problem with the shareholder mentality that’s ruining a lot of products and services. They don’t give a damn about the longevity of the company. They only care about money now; and as soon as things go sour, they’ll sell their shares and move on to the next company.

          • ProfessorProteus@lemmy.world
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            1 year ago

            I picture it as taking off in a plane full of their employees and customers, and climbing as high as possible. Then, as soon as the engines stall or fuel runs out, the execs casually jump out and pull the ripcords on their golden parachutes.

        • Kodemystic@lemmy.kodemystic.dev
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          There should be law forcing major players in the market to commit for 10 years + when they buy shares above a certain threshold and when those 10+ years pass they should be forced to justify when selling. Might be dumb but just saying as things are the market/system will just rot on the daily. Shits corrupted to the core imo.

          • jarfil@lemmy.world
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            1 year ago

            IPOs usually come out with something like that, investors who commit to not sell their shares for half a year or maybe a year. After that… it’s each one for their own.

          • wizardbeard@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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            1 year ago

            I know that execs have time windows they have to be in to buy and sell their stocks, and it has to be planned months in advance, but a massive TOS change like this doesn’t happen overnight or without buy in all the way to the top. They absolutely planned this, and I hope the SEC nails their asses to the wall over it.

            • derfl007@lemmy.wtf
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              1 year ago

              yeah I’ll admit i don’t know much about how all this stufd works, but thanks to others i also found out about these rules. But imo those time windows are absolutely useless in preventing insider trading if they plan to do both things in the same time window anyways

      • li10
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        1 year ago

        I’m sure they’re gonna be getting many days off work now

    • WhiskyTangoFoxtrot@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      I’ve been working on an indie game project for several years now and invested thousands of dollars into it. Fortunately, I had the foresight to use Godot for it, but if I’d used Unity instead I’d be completely screwed right now. Hell, I’m still using the 3.X branch of Godot because I figured that migrating everything to version 4 would be more trouble than it’s worth. Going to a completely new engine at this stage in development would be completely out of the question.

        • WhiskyTangoFoxtrot@lemmy.world
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          No, it’s a commercial release. I’d been doing everything with placeholder art throughout most of development but I’ve recently commissioned some artists for some professional assets, and I think I’ll have enough to put together some screenshots and a demo video and get a page on Steam, etc. set up within the next few weeks.

          It’s a Metroidvania with influences from cinematic platformers (Another World, Flashback) and immersive sims (System Shock, Deus Ex.)

      • anlumo@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        I’m sorry to stifle your expectations, but if you’re working on that project on your own, you’re very unlikely to reach the 200k/year revenue necessary to trigger this new pricing scheme.

    • TheDarkKnight@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      Could be stock options as well. I’d be shitty if part of my compensation was stock and I saw blatant mismanagement taking place.

  • MossBear@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    Three years ago after trying Unity for a month I chose to learn Godot instead. I see now how right that decision was. Well done past self. Have a future cookie.

    • Zeth0s@lemmy.world
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      For me the rule that has always worked is “bet everything on open-source”. It has always paid off.

      When people at uni used Matlab, I learned R (before R-studio even existed) and python. I moved to linux as soon as I could. I never wanted to learn anything MS or Apple specific, or proprietary technologies such as visual studio, excel, vba, c#, SAS. I went on docker ASAP…

      Now the world in my field runs on open source tecnologies, and I am the leaders of the “new stuff” wherever company I go.

      On the long term learning open source solutions is always a win. Best case scenario it becomes the industry standard, worst case scenario it gives you the know how to master proprietary tools

      • Serinus@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        C# and Visual Studio are pretty great now, and they don’t lock you into Windows at all. Most of C# is open source.

        • Zeth0s@lemmy.world
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          My experience is very different. I know a lot of c# developers, they are locked, even if c# now looks open source. They are locked as a mac user is locked to mac. C# is the most monopolizing language I know. Usually people know more languages, they easily move from one language to the other, from one programming style to the other depending on the task, they can easily learn different tools, different ways of doing stuff. All c# developers I know seriously struggle to move out of their conform zone, that is visual studio. To the level that many even struggle with vscode. And the way of doing things of visual studio is usually good for windows but it is the worst when doing more “modern” things, from ai to kubernetes

          • Serinus@lemmy.world
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            So your experience is that you’ve never heard of Swift and you haven’t heard anything about dotnet since Visual Basic in 2002.

            • beetus@lemmy.world
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              1 year ago

              Classic example of experience bias. “Well in my experience this is how the world works”

      • namingthingsiseasy@programming.dev
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        1 year ago

        Preach it! One of my colleagues writes all his machine learning code in Matlab. Brilliant person, has done some incredible research, but can do anything with the code because no organization is going to bring Matlab into its clusters and pay for all the licenses needed to run it. So while plenty of presentations and papers have been written of this research, the actual process of letting people use it takes an additional army of Python developers to translate and test every new feature and enhancement.

        This is what happens when you build your career around walled garden platforms. Inevitably, you’ll reach a dead end. Focus on learning tools that enable you the most. Open source will always win in the end, because it will never come with this very heavy piece of baggage that proprietary tools have. This is why the internet is built on Linux and not Windows.

        Unity is the same way. When you build your career on a technology that a single company can strip from you on a whim, that’s a big risk. I really hope that Godot and other open source engines take off after this. It will be a painful transition for many developers, but hopefully it’s a lesson very well learned.

        • Serinus@lemmy.world
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          1 year ago

          Mono is becoming outdated now that dotnet just supports Linux.

          (It took a lot from mono to do so.)

          • evatronic@lemm.ee
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            1 year ago

            I was completely unaware! I haven’t been keeping up with the .net / c# ecosystem mostly because my job doesn’t make me. That’s both good and bad, I guess.

      • kibiz0r@midwest.social
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        1 year ago

        For me, it’s “learn everything”.

        The best devs in XYZ language/framework aren’t the ones who are experts in XYZ, but the ones who are just good enough in XYZ and 15 other things that they see what XYZ excels at, and lacks, and how patterns from elsewhere could be adapted to supercharge XYZ’s strengths and mitigate its weaknesses.

      • Staple_Diet@aussie.zone
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        When people at uni used Matlab, I learned R (before R-studio even existed) and python.

        Good move. MATLAB is trash.

        I never wanted to learn anything MS… …or proprietary technologies such as… …excel

        Eh, depending on your career Excel is worth a tiny bit of time given its pervasiveness and how powerful it is. But like you say, learning open source will make Excel a piece of cake.

      • MossBear@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        That’s a good rule. I only accidentally got into open-source, but now that I know what it is and what it’s all about, I am totally sold on it and will almost always choose open-source over proprietary alternatives.

          • DichotoDeezNutz@lemmy.world
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            1 year ago

            Is it the UI? We use Google sheets at my work and I hate it. Missing formulas & formatting options that I like.

            It works fine if you do the basics, but its not as full featured as I want it.

            • canuckkat@lemmy.world
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              Really? My Google Sheets has so many formulas and conditional formatting. There’s so much I can’t do in Excel that I can do in Sheets :/

              Also, adding checkboxes in Excel is a pain lol. They made it so difficult.

        • Zeth0s@lemmy.world
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          I don’t use excel other than as a glorified calculator. I don’t use word as well. My department knows and I am pretty open when I do interviews. If the job requires to open more than 1 file Excel every 2 months, I am out. If I need to open a single excel sheet with VBA, they wasted my time.

          Excel is fine, is what people do with excel that is not fine

          • sumofchemicals@lemmy.world
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            1 year ago

            What do you use for spreadsheets, libreoffice? I could see not liking a specific program but I love a spreadsheet and use them constantly. I use libre for ideological reasons but don’t find it as convenient for certain tasks as excel or google sheets.

            • Zeth0s@lemmy.world
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              1 year ago

              Python/pandas, R or a real database depending on the task.

              I don’t dislike excel. I dislike what people do with excel. And I dislike vba

      • Afrazzle@sh.itjust.works
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        I’m curious why you chose R as an alternative to Matlab instead of Scilab. Scilab is specifically designed to be a free and open source alternative to Matlab.

        For my thesis I was writing some test software and when deciding which language to use Matlab was immediately ruled out due to the cost (and also the extra cost for the toolkits I’d need). I instead went with Scilab which now means that anybody wanting to reproduce my results can do so freely.

        • Zeth0s@lemmy.world
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          Because at the time I needed more the statistical and plotting part. Ggplot was not yet a thing, but R was already pretty nice for plotting and stat.

          I was using other, lower-level languages for more intensive tasks, as I was working in high performance computing.

          • Afrazzle@sh.itjust.works
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            1 year ago

            Makes sense, thanks for the response! It is kind of fun to have a mix of the higher level (like R/Scilab) and lower level (which I used Fortran for mine).

            • Zeth0s@lemmy.world
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              We all started with fortran the old times in hpc and scientific computing. Kids nowadays don’t know the thrill of retro engineering fortran code! /s

      • MossBear@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        Leave one out overnight and tell your present self that they can have it in the future if they do x before tomorrow. If you succeed, then you get a cookie. If you fail, eat the cookie anyway. At least you tried.

  • Rentlar@lemmy.ca
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    1 year ago

    Soooooooo it wasn’t “the gamers” making the credible threats after all, even if I wouldn’t put it past the gaming community to make threats of this nature.

    • treadful@lemmy.zip
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      What even is “the gaming community” anymore? Basically everyone except boomers play games.

        • Intralexical@lemmy.world
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          …There’s probably an ecological definition for “community” that you could try to transfer over… I think in cases where a large group of individuals don’t actually interact with all of each other either directly or indirectly, but are nonetheless relevant as a grouping because they share a particularly contextually prominent set of traits (E.G. “Plays Video Games”), then “population” might be a more appropriate term (if a bit sterile).

      • from_the_black_lagoon@lemmy.world
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        I think it is more than just people who plays games. It’s more people who play games and participate in community, which is a smaller percentage, though still probably quite big

    • PoliticalAgitator@lemm.ee
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      I’m not sure if anyone at Unity ever accused the gamers, we all just jumped to the conclusion because that’s exactly the kind of thing the scene would do.

      I’m pretty sure back when I made games, it wasn’t Unity employees sending me unhinged tantrums because a number was changed from an 11 to a 12.

      • AeonFelis@lemmy.world
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        Why would Unity go against the gamers? They are the one who are going to generate installations.

        • kamenLady.@lemmy.world
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          Maybe Unity thought it would be a good way to make some noise and keep Unity in people’s mouths.

          The inverted Oscar Slap, that was supposed to keep the object’s name out of people’s mouths.

    • pinkdrunkenelephants@sopuli.xyz
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      Why would anyone be surprised?

      That Unity employee could have been put up to make those threats to smear the policy’s detractors for all we know.

      • saboteur@sopuli.xyz
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        That’s an implausible take. Loyal employees wouldn’t go for such a ploy and disgruntled employees … well, conceivably would take such action on their on volition.

  • Chaotic Entropy
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    “an employee made a threat towards his employer using social media”

    Wow. That’s… probably against their internal social media policy.

  • Phoenixz@lemmy.ca
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    A nice company has a great product and is well liked by its customers.

    New executive manager comes in and thinks “how can I quickly get a huge bonus”? The answer always is implement new changes that will tuin the company in a year and a half, but that manager will have received his bonuses and is gone, leaving the company in ruins.

    I can’t say 100% for sure that this is what happened, but whenever something like this happens, it’s just somebody deciding they want a quick buck

    • pleasemakesense@lemmy.world
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      I dont understand how the board allows this behaviour, how do they not interween when an executive clearly is abusing the terms of the contract at the expense of the conpany

      • PoliticalAgitator@lemm.ee
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        They know exactly what they’re doing.

        They’ve been collecting metrics for months and plugging them into spreadsheets to figure out exactly how profitable this will be, just waiting for the right moment to pull the trigger.

        They knew it would be incredibly unpopular. They knew it would likely kill the company one day.

        But the spreadsheet doesn’t care about any of that so neither do they. They sold off stocks then made the announcement.

        When the changes go live, they’ll squeeze everything they can out of successful projects, who will be left in a position of “losing 50% to Unity is better than losing 100% from pulling the game”.

        They’ll stuff their pockets with us much of that money as they can and when the spreadsheet tells them to, they’ll pull the plug and strip the company for parts.

        It was the best thing for them and that was all that mattered.

        • TeoTwawki@lemmy.world
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          Not to mention money can be made litteraly betting on the stock price swinging from the bad news. Calls and puts plan far enough in advance and automate/preset triggers via broker agreements and can even avoid getting nailed for the obvious insider trading a lot of the time.

        • piecat@lemmy.world
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          This shit should be illegal. If it isn’t already.

          Destroying a company for your own personal gain is why America is falling under

          • PoliticalAgitator@lemm.ee
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            It’s not going to change as long as the only people to vote for are “red neoliberals” or “blue neoliberals”.

        • anlumo@lemmy.world
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          They also made the announcement right after an iPhone announcement. Unfortunately, the iPhone was completely underwhelming, so the news didn’t get buried like they probably expected.

      • Saneless@lemmy.world
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        The executive was hired by the board or with the board support (CEO usually)

        They did exactly what they wanted

      • chiliedogg@lemmy.world
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        The stakeholders want to cash out. A temporary bump to increase the company’s value with no regard for future prospects is great for them.

      • AnUnusualRelic@lemmy.world
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        This scheme worked fine for thousands before him, so clearly board members are not an issue, presumably because they benefit from it.

  • AeonFelis@lemmy.world
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    They should not be getting death threat from employees. They should be getting legal threats from the SEC, and prosecuted for insider trading.

    • cjsolx@lemmy.world
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      Should should should should should

      Nothing works within our government anymore.

      • Uriel238 [all pronouns]@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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        And as shit goes down because no one enforces corporate, the rest of us suffer the consequences.

        When upper managemeny does stock selloffs before sabotaging the value of the company, it generates distrust in the whole market if they are not prosecuted. Traders stop buying and the economy goes into recession.

    • charles@lemmy.world
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      I thought after some initial inflammatory headlines, ultimately the stock sale was a periodically scheduled sale. Has information on that changed?

      • phx@lemmy.ca
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        Fun thing is though, if it’s a regular scheduled thing and you schedule your burn-shit-down announcement until after, wellllll…

        • charles@lemmy.world
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          I mean I guess you could time it once like that, but if that’s your plan, you could have just sold it all a year before you planned on tanking the stock when you set up the schedule and make more money. Or just not tank the stock.

  • TwilightVulpine@lemmy.world
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    Honestly at this point I feel worse for the guy who made the threat than anyone else. Can you imagine what is like working with those sort of bosses with such exploitative tendencies and an utter disregard for an entire industry? They get to ruin countless lives but if anyone gets mad that’s the unacceptable one who is punished.

    • Kayn@dormi.zone
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      Then why don’t they look for work at another company?

      Making death threats is still a major dick move regardless of the circumstances.

      • xantoxis@lemmy.world
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        It is, but all we have right now is Unity’s claim that this is what happened. We don’t even know the content of the threat, who made it, why they made it. All of that context could cast this in a wildly different light. I am very suspicious of Unity the company’s motives here in saying this when we haven’t heard from anyone else.

        • Kayn@dormi.zone
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          How can this be cast in any light that’s not negative?

          Companies don’t just make up death threats.

          • xantoxis@lemmy.world
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            They absolutely do when it benefits them and they think they can get away with it, I don’t know how you could make such a blanket claim without questioning yourself just a little bit.

            And of course it would be negative, but I think there’s a chance the claim casts a negative light on the company, and not on the employee, who is as yet unnamed. As it stands now, any of the following could be true:

            1. The entire story is fiction, made up by Unity to distract from literally everything else about them. Distractions are massively important to companies at times like this, and it’s almost like clockwork that you find them making up distractions when they can’t find a way to put a good spin on the press.
            2. There’s a real employee who posted something on social media, and it was a death threat. The death threat was about the current news. Bad employee, hope they see some consequences. I am doubting this right now because we don’t have any actual evidence of it, and because of point (1). Furthermore, the vagueness of this press announcement and the fact that “you wouldn’t know him, he works in another state” gives them cover . . .
            3. There’s a real employee who posted something negative on social media. It was not a death threat, and is being deliberately misconstrued by Unity to allow them to deploy point (1).
            4. There’s a real death threat posted on social media by someone who sucks. That person is not, in fact, a Unity employee and the announcement to the contrary was either deliberate misinformation or a simple mistaken identity. IDK what this would say about the company, but gamers can be real shitty. If this one is the case, I hope that person sees consequences, but they probably won’t.
            5. There’s a real post on social media framed as a death threat, deliberately planted by someone at Unity to create a distraction, see point (1).

            There’s more, and quite frankly it gets tiresome to see people jumping to defend when ploys like this have been the playbook for shitty companies since the invention of the company. I don’t know which of these things will be turn out to be true, but neither do you, and it’s so boring to see someone claiming they know the facts here for sure.

          • ram@lemmy.caOP
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            1 year ago

            They literally do though to steer the conversation to one wherein they’re a sympathetic figure. Never hear of PR?

      • TwilightVulpine@lemmy.world
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        It might have been wiser, but seems to me we got to a point we should be thinking of the circumstances.

        Besides, that only would have solved their individual problem, IF they even managed it. The way the company is being run would remain the same. How it would impact all the people who rely on that engine would remain the same.

        It’s “never acceptable” to threaten someone, but intentionally ruining countless people’s livelihoods is “nothing personal”. Something is off about that.

        • Kayn@dormi.zone
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          1 year ago

          You can’t just solve a company’s culture by yourself.

          You can either convince enough people to unionize, or you can save yourself.

    • Elderos@lemmings.world
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      1 year ago

      Unity employees have extraordinary working conditions and pay. It sucks that their hard work gets tarnished by stupid executives and poor PR but let’s not paint the employee as a victim here.

      • TwilightVulpine@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        The number of people being ruined is pretty different though.

        I get it, it’s a callous attitude, but I’m wondering if going for civility above anything else is really working out. I’d love for such situations to be settled with a reasonable discussion, but do they ever?

          • FaceDeer@kbin.social
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            1 year ago

            Because a threat is not an attempt. Most likely they had absolutely no intention to carry through with it.

            It’s still bad but saying “I’m gonna kill you” is not the same as actually trying to kill you.

            • SocialMediaRefugee@lemmy.world
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              1 year ago

              Because a threat is not an attempt…but saying “I’m gonna kill you” is not the same as actually trying to kill you.

              Obviously, but you don’t ignore it either. You don’t wait for a DUI to crash before doing something about the threat. Say you’d like to shoot the president and see if the secret service ignores you.

              • FaceDeer@kbin.social
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                1 year ago

                You said that he didn’t kill anyone because he got caught first. Which implies that if he didn’t get caught he would have actually killed someone.

                They really aren’t the same. It’s a common fallacy on the Internet to lunge straight to the worst possible case and equate that to whatever it is you’re arguing, but it really isn’t the same. Sure, the secret service won’t ignore you if you say you’d like to shoot the president. But will their reaction be the same as if you’ve smuggled a gun in to a press conference and are spotted actively moving to get near him? Obviously not, because what I said remains true. Simply saying “I’m gonna kill you” is not the same as actually trying to kill you.

    • ???@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      But they didn’t just get mad (if this is the full story). They sent them a death threat. I think there is a fine line.

      • pinkdrunkenelephants@sopuli.xyz
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        1 year ago

        I’ll bite: Death threats are not as serious as tanking an entire company and ruining thousands of lives.

        (I don’t actually think that; I just feel like playing devil’s advocate today)

          • pinkdrunkenelephants@sopuli.xyz
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            A fair point. None of the news articles even give us any real, meaningful details as to what happened so we don’t know if it was just execs who were threatened or if, perhaps, there was a bomb threat or something. I wish we could see a screenshot of the actual threat so we could make a determination.

  • Tacos_y_margaritas@lemmynsfw.com
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    I can just see their PR team last night planning to spin Unity as a victim after the death threat, in an effort to stop the bleeding, only to find out it was one of their own employees.

    • Echo Dot
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      Yeah it’s even worse than that. They knew it was from one of their employees but chose not to release that information because “PR”.

      They can go spin on it.

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      1 year ago

      People with passion wanted to work on a great project only to see how the vision was corrupted and turned into a monster.

      Like, the regular employee isn’t excited about shit changes either.

      • Steeve@lemmy.ca
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        I don’t think “regular employee” should be used anywhere close to this story lol. Imagine your passion project being building something for someone else and when that gets upset you resort to death theeats against your employer? Jesus.

        Edit: Lol when this story first came out the consensus here was that death threats were not cool, now that it’s an employee everyone is sympathetic? Alright, let’s spin this story to fit our bias, why not!

          • Steeve@lemmy.ca
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            That’s ignoring voting though, which is a good way to get the average sentiment of a community regardless of who is doing the commenting. Is it more likely that the community’s average opinion of death threats flipped overnight or that the new information changed the average opinion?

    • muse@kbin.social
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      Either someone hates to see their company burn to the ground and responded in an extremely immature way, or a higher up went “let’s get this public town hall canceled in a way that people feel sorry for us. SIMMONS! MAKE A DEATH THREAT NOW!”

      The former seems the most likely, but I always hold out hope that it’s middle management being a dumbass as corporate’s gonna corporate

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        Oh, I imagine working conditions there have gotten worse in recent times, too. The kind of leadership that fucks over their clients like this don’t start with those clients. They treat everyone as a resource to be exploited, and employees are the ones they can abused most readily.

        The public furor over the pricing model is the opportunity, not the motive.

      • Chariotwheel@kbin.social
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        The CEO and his cronies don’t understand that people work for more than money. They think all people come into work just to do what is required to get money or, if there is ambition, to rise through the ranks and make more money or have ideas that make more money.

        However, there are people, especially in projects like this, that are also there because they believe in something. Believe that they can help creating something special that helps people. Unity has it’s dominance among other things because it’s an easy to use and easy to learn tool that enables people to create games that would’ve otherwise had trouble getting into development.

        • Chaotic Entropy
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          Be passionate about your work! Right up to the point where you start disagreeing with how I am bastardising it… then you can fuck off.

          • Chariotwheel@kbin.social
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            1 year ago

            Are you working something you hate?

            A lot of people are fine working what they love for a company, surely there are issues, but not all companies are batshit and ruin their product.

            • scottyjoe9@sh.itjust.works
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              It’s not so black and white though. Passion jobs are often exploited because people will put up with it more and there is higher demand for those types of jobs.

              Your best bet is to find something that is interesting and nice enough to keep you content and not bored to death but not so enthralling that you feel like working unpaid overtime or what ever. Bonus points if it’s paid relatively well.

    • Altima NEO@lemmy.zip
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      Yeah, it sounded weird that it would be a gamer or developer, much less any “fan” of unity.

    • ProfessorProteus@lemmy.world
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      I had assumed it was a fabricated threat that came from “inside the house.” Now it looks like it was a real threat from inside. I can’t condone what the employee said, but I can sympathize with their plight. Not to mention that of all Indie devs whose workflows have likely been uprooted by Unity’s selfish move.