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Higher-paid employees looking for work are having a tough time, and it could be a sign of a shift in the workplace
(www.businessinsider.com)
This is a most excellent place for technology news and articles.
I wonder if that had anything to do with low interests rates and Venture Capitalists practically throwing cash at startups?
Other industries just simply didn't have the same advantages, and now that tech companies no longer have those advantages either, they're becoming just like any other corporation.
Also, tech companies are on the forefront of businesses who sell services to other businesses which tends to be much more profitable than selling to consumers. Regular consumers have never been Google's customers, even though most regular people use Gmail. Their customers are the advertisers.
People were throwing money at tech because tech was "disruptive" which meant finding a way to skirt existing employment laws, destroy established industries with worker protections, and then boost the prices to insane levels once they've completely wrecked traditional competition. See: Uber.
I wonder why they were throwing so much money at tech? It wasn't about Union Busting, was it?? Oh wait, it totally was.
Many of these companies are currently suing the US Government claiming the FTC has no authority to regulate them and that the National Labor Relations Board is "unconstitutional."
Acting like "tech" was in any special position other than being poised to exploit the living fuck out of everything feels pretty naive.
Related: The Tech Baron Seeking to Purge San Francisco of “Blues” The tech barons are and were fascists. They're happy to pay unwitting people very well to help build a terrible new world nobody else actually wants.