In an email obtained by Motherboard, Google tells YouTube Music workers it will “not be participating in collective bargaining.”

  • Bob Robertson IX @discuss.tchncs.de
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    10 months ago

    My company does this too. In fact the vast majority of people on my team are outsourced employees, but I very much set their hours and direct their work. And I make certain that I do so via email. I also email those above me to let them know when I change someone’s hours.

    I also brought up on our employee only DE&I call that the fact we have 1st & 2nd class employees makes it hard to claim we strive for Equity. “We are always evaluating the composition of our workforce and this is just one factor that we consider.”

    It’s not just Google. But it Google falls, then everyone else will really start reconsidering things, if they remove Google then the real fight being fought here will be lost.

    • Changetheview@lemmy.world
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      10 months ago

      It’s an extremely common strategy now across many industries. Reduces responsibilities (costs and liabilities) and increases profit margins.

      Good to see these workers putting up a fight. There are standards to determine employee vs contractor status, but they’re rarely enforced. And one major reason why is the lack of bargaining power. Many “contractors” have to work together and make a strong case that they are under employee-like control.