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    ArsTechnica

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      Tech worker movements grow as threats of RTO, AI loom

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica • 28 December 2024

    It feels like tech workers have caught very few breaks over the past several years, between ongoing mass layoffs, stagnating wages amid inflation, AI supposedly coming for jobs, and unpopular orders to return to office that, for many, threaten to disrupt work-life balance.

    But in 2024, a potentially critical mass of tech workers seemed to reach a breaking point. As labor rights groups advocating for tech workers told Ars, these workers are banding together in sustained strong numbers and are either winning or appear tantalizingly close to winning better worker conditions at major tech companies, including Amazon, Apple, Google, and Microsoft.

    In February, the industry-wide Tech Workers Coalition (TWC) noted that "the tech workers movement is far more expansive and impactful" than even labor rights advocates realized, noting that unionized tech workers have gone beyond early stories about Googlers marching in the streets and now "make the headlines on a daily basis."

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    • tagfeatures tagfeatures tagfeatures tagpolicy tagpolicy tagpolicy tagai tagai tagai tagartificial intelligence tagartificial intelligence tagartificial intelligence tagremote work tagremote work tagremote work tagreturn-to-office tagreturn-to-office tagreturn-to-office tagrto tagrto tagrto tagrto mandates tagrto mandates tagrto mandates tagfeatures tagfeatures tagfeatures tagpolicy tagpolicy tagpolicy tagai tagai tagai tagartificial intelligence tagartificial intelligence tagartificial intelligence tagremote work tagremote work tagremote work tagreturn-to-office tagreturn-to-office tagreturn-to-office tagrto tagrto tagrto tagrto mandates tagrto mandates tagrto mandates tagfeatures tagfeatures tagfeatures tagpolicy tagpolicy tagpolicy tagai tagai tagai tagartificial intelligence tagartificial intelligence tagartificial intelligence tagremote work tagremote work tagremote work tagreturn-to-office tagreturn-to-office tagreturn-to-office tagrto tagrto tagrto tagrto mandates tagrto mandates tagrto mandates

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    • Ar chevron_right

      Tech worker movements grow as threats of RTO, AI loom

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica • 28 December 2024

    It feels like tech workers have caught very few breaks over the past several years, between ongoing mass layoffs, stagnating wages amid inflation, AI supposedly coming for jobs, and unpopular orders to return to office that, for many, threaten to disrupt work-life balance.

    But in 2024, a potentially critical mass of tech workers seemed to reach a breaking point. As labor rights groups advocating for tech workers told Ars, these workers are banding together in sustained strong numbers and are either winning or appear tantalizingly close to winning better worker conditions at major tech companies, including Amazon, Apple, Google, and Microsoft.

    In February, the industry-wide Tech Workers Coalition (TWC) noted that "the tech workers movement is far more expansive and impactful" than even labor rights advocates realized, noting that unionized tech workers have gone beyond early stories about Googlers marching in the streets and now "make the headlines on a daily basis."

    Read full article

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    • tagfeatures tagfeatures tagfeatures tagpolicy tagpolicy tagpolicy tagai tagai tagai tagartificial intelligence tagartificial intelligence tagartificial intelligence tagremote work tagremote work tagremote work tagreturn-to-office tagreturn-to-office tagreturn-to-office tagrto tagrto tagrto tagrto mandates tagrto mandates tagrto mandates tagfeatures tagfeatures tagfeatures tagpolicy tagpolicy tagpolicy tagai tagai tagai tagartificial intelligence tagartificial intelligence tagartificial intelligence tagremote work tagremote work tagremote work tagreturn-to-office tagreturn-to-office tagreturn-to-office tagrto tagrto tagrto tagrto mandates tagrto mandates tagrto mandates tagfeatures tagfeatures tagfeatures tagpolicy tagpolicy tagpolicy tagai tagai tagai tagartificial intelligence tagartificial intelligence tagartificial intelligence tagremote work tagremote work tagremote work tagreturn-to-office tagreturn-to-office tagreturn-to-office tagrto tagrto tagrto tagrto mandates tagrto mandates tagrto mandates

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    • Ar chevron_right

      Tech worker movements grow as threats of RTO, AI loom

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica • 28 December 2024

    It feels like tech workers have caught very few breaks over the past several years, between ongoing mass layoffs, stagnating wages amid inflation, AI supposedly coming for jobs, and unpopular orders to return to office that, for many, threaten to disrupt work-life balance.

    But in 2024, a potentially critical mass of tech workers seemed to reach a breaking point. As labor rights groups advocating for tech workers told Ars, these workers are banding together in sustained strong numbers and are either winning or appear tantalizingly close to winning better worker conditions at major tech companies, including Amazon, Apple, Google, and Microsoft.

    In February, the industry-wide Tech Workers Coalition (TWC) noted that "the tech workers movement is far more expansive and impactful" than even labor rights advocates realized, noting that unionized tech workers have gone beyond early stories about Googlers marching in the streets and now "make the headlines on a daily basis."

    Read full article

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    • tagfeatures tagfeatures tagfeatures tagpolicy tagpolicy tagpolicy tagai tagai tagai tagartificial intelligence tagartificial intelligence tagartificial intelligence tagremote work tagremote work tagremote work tagreturn-to-office tagreturn-to-office tagreturn-to-office tagrto tagrto tagrto tagrto mandates tagrto mandates tagrto mandates tagfeatures tagfeatures tagfeatures tagpolicy tagpolicy tagpolicy tagai tagai tagai tagartificial intelligence tagartificial intelligence tagartificial intelligence tagremote work tagremote work tagremote work tagreturn-to-office tagreturn-to-office tagreturn-to-office tagrto tagrto tagrto tagrto mandates tagrto mandates tagrto mandates tagfeatures tagfeatures tagfeatures tagpolicy tagpolicy tagpolicy tagai tagai tagai tagartificial intelligence tagartificial intelligence tagartificial intelligence tagremote work tagremote work tagremote work tagreturn-to-office tagreturn-to-office tagreturn-to-office tagrto tagrto tagrto tagrto mandates tagrto mandates tagrto mandates

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      After a 24-second test of its engines, the New Glenn rocket is ready to fly

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica • 28 December 2024

    After a long day of stops and starts that stretched well into the evening, and on what appeared to be the company's fifth attempt Friday, Blue Origin successfully ignited the seven main engines on its massive New Glenn rocket.

    The test firing as fog built over the Florida coast marks the final major step in the rocket company's campaign to bring the New Glenn rocket—a privately developed, super-heavy lift vehicle—to launch readiness. Blue Origin said it fired the vehicle's engines for a duration of 24 seconds. They fired at full thrust for 13 of those seconds.

    "This is a monumental milestone and a glimpse of what’s just around the corner for New Glenn’s first launch," said Jarrett Jones,  senior vice president of the New Glenn program, in a news release . "Today’s success proves that our rigorous approach to testing–combined with our incredible tooling and design engineering–is working as intended."

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    • Ar chevron_right

      After a 24-second test of its engines, the New Glenn rocket is ready to fly

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica • 28 December 2024

    After a long day of stops and starts that stretched well into the evening, and on what appeared to be the company's fifth attempt Friday, Blue Origin successfully ignited the seven main engines on its massive New Glenn rocket.

    The test firing as fog built over the Florida coast marks the final major step in the rocket company's campaign to bring the New Glenn rocket—a privately developed, super-heavy lift vehicle—to launch readiness. Blue Origin said it fired the vehicle's engines for a duration of 24 seconds. They fired at full thrust for 13 of those seconds.

    "This is a monumental milestone and a glimpse of what’s just around the corner for New Glenn’s first launch," said Jarrett Jones,  senior vice president of the New Glenn program, in a news release . "Today’s success proves that our rigorous approach to testing–combined with our incredible tooling and design engineering–is working as intended."

    Read full article

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    • tagspace tagspace tagspace tagblue origin tagblue origin tagblue origin tagnew glenn tagnew glenn tagnew glenn tagspace tagspace tagspace tagblue origin tagblue origin tagblue origin tagnew glenn tagnew glenn tagnew glenn tagspace tagspace tagspace tagblue origin tagblue origin tagblue origin tagnew glenn tagnew glenn tagnew glenn

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    • Ar chevron_right

      After a 24-second test of its engines, the New Glenn rocket is ready to fly

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica • 28 December 2024

    After a long day of stops and starts that stretched well into the evening, and on what appeared to be the company's fifth attempt Friday, Blue Origin successfully ignited the seven main engines on its massive New Glenn rocket.

    The test firing as fog built over the Florida coast marks the final major step in the rocket company's campaign to bring the New Glenn rocket—a privately developed, super-heavy lift vehicle—to launch readiness. Blue Origin said it fired the vehicle's engines for a duration of 24 seconds. They fired at full thrust for 13 of those seconds.

    "This is a monumental milestone and a glimpse of what’s just around the corner for New Glenn’s first launch," said Jarrett Jones,  senior vice president of the New Glenn program, in a news release . "Today’s success proves that our rigorous approach to testing–combined with our incredible tooling and design engineering–is working as intended."

    Read full article

    Comments

    • tagspace tagspace tagspace tagblue origin tagblue origin tagblue origin tagnew glenn tagnew glenn tagnew glenn tagspace tagspace tagspace tagblue origin tagblue origin tagblue origin tagnew glenn tagnew glenn tagnew glenn tagspace tagspace tagspace tagblue origin tagblue origin tagblue origin tagnew glenn tagnew glenn tagnew glenn

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      YouTuber won DMCA fight with fake Nintendo lawyer by detecting spoofed email

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica • 27 December 2024

    A brave YouTuber has managed to defeat a fake Nintendo lawyer improperly targeting his channel with copyright takedowns that could have seen his entire channel removed if YouTube issued one more strike.

    Sharing his story with The Verge , Dominik "Domtendo" Neumayer—a German YouTuber who has broadcasted play-throughs of popular games for 17 years—said that it all started when YouTube removed some videos from his channel that were centered on The Legend of Zelda: Echoes of Wisdom . Those removals came after a pair of complaints were filed under the Digital Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA) and generated two strikes. Everyone on YouTube knows that three strikes mean you're out and off the platform permanently.

    Suddenly at risk of losing the entire channel he had built on YouTube, Neumayer was stunned, The Verge noted, partly because most game companies consider "Let's Play" videos like his to be free marketing, not a threat to their business. And while Nintendo has been known to target YouTubers with DMCA takedowns, it generally historically took no issues with accounts like his.

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    • tagpolicy tagpolicy tagpolicy tagcopyright troll tagcopyright troll tagcopyright troll tagdigital millennium copyright act tagdigital millennium copyright act tagdigital millennium copyright act tagdmca takedown tagdmca takedown tagdmca takedown tagnintendo tagnintendo tagnintendo tagyoutube tagyoutube tagyoutube tagyoutubers tagyoutubers tagyoutubers tagpolicy tagpolicy tagpolicy tagcopyright troll tagcopyright troll tagcopyright troll tagdigital millennium copyright act tagdigital millennium copyright act tagdigital millennium copyright act tagdmca takedown tagdmca takedown tagdmca takedown tagnintendo tagnintendo tagnintendo tagyoutube tagyoutube tagyoutube tagyoutubers tagyoutubers tagyoutubers tagpolicy tagpolicy tagpolicy tagcopyright troll tagcopyright troll tagcopyright troll tagdigital millennium copyright act tagdigital millennium copyright act tagdigital millennium copyright act tagdmca takedown tagdmca takedown tagdmca takedown tagnintendo tagnintendo tagnintendo tagyoutube tagyoutube tagyoutube tagyoutubers tagyoutubers tagyoutubers

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    • Ar chevron_right

      YouTuber won DMCA fight with fake Nintendo lawyer by detecting spoofed email

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica • 27 December 2024

    A brave YouTuber has managed to defeat a fake Nintendo lawyer improperly targeting his channel with copyright takedowns that could have seen his entire channel removed if YouTube issued one more strike.

    Sharing his story with The Verge , Dominik "Domtendo" Neumayer—a German YouTuber who has broadcasted play-throughs of popular games for 17 years—said that it all started when YouTube removed some videos from his channel that were centered on The Legend of Zelda: Echoes of Wisdom . Those removals came after a pair of complaints were filed under the Digital Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA) and generated two strikes. Everyone on YouTube knows that three strikes mean you're out and off the platform permanently.

    Suddenly at risk of losing the entire channel he had built on YouTube, Neumayer was stunned, The Verge noted, partly because most game companies consider "Let's Play" videos like his to be free marketing, not a threat to their business. And while Nintendo has been known to target YouTubers with DMCA takedowns, it generally historically took no issues with accounts like his.

    Read full article

    Comments

    • tagpolicy tagpolicy tagpolicy tagcopyright troll tagcopyright troll tagcopyright troll tagdigital millennium copyright act tagdigital millennium copyright act tagdigital millennium copyright act tagdmca takedown tagdmca takedown tagdmca takedown tagnintendo tagnintendo tagnintendo tagyoutube tagyoutube tagyoutube tagyoutubers tagyoutubers tagyoutubers tagpolicy tagpolicy tagpolicy tagcopyright troll tagcopyright troll tagcopyright troll tagdigital millennium copyright act tagdigital millennium copyright act tagdigital millennium copyright act tagdmca takedown tagdmca takedown tagdmca takedown tagnintendo tagnintendo tagnintendo tagyoutube tagyoutube tagyoutube tagyoutubers tagyoutubers tagyoutubers tagpolicy tagpolicy tagpolicy tagcopyright troll tagcopyright troll tagcopyright troll tagdigital millennium copyright act tagdigital millennium copyright act tagdigital millennium copyright act tagdmca takedown tagdmca takedown tagdmca takedown tagnintendo tagnintendo tagnintendo tagyoutube tagyoutube tagyoutube tagyoutubers tagyoutubers tagyoutubers

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    • Ar chevron_right

      YouTuber won DMCA fight with fake Nintendo lawyer by detecting spoofed email

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica • 27 December 2024

    A brave YouTuber has managed to defeat a fake Nintendo lawyer improperly targeting his channel with copyright takedowns that could have seen his entire channel removed if YouTube issued one more strike.

    Sharing his story with The Verge , Dominik "Domtendo" Neumayer—a German YouTuber who has broadcasted play-throughs of popular games for 17 years—said that it all started when YouTube removed some videos from his channel that were centered on The Legend of Zelda: Echoes of Wisdom . Those removals came after a pair of complaints were filed under the Digital Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA) and generated two strikes. Everyone on YouTube knows that three strikes mean you're out and off the platform permanently.

    Suddenly at risk of losing the entire channel he had built on YouTube, Neumayer was stunned, The Verge noted, partly because most game companies consider "Let's Play" videos like his to be free marketing, not a threat to their business. And while Nintendo has been known to target YouTubers with DMCA takedowns, it generally historically took no issues with accounts like his.

    Read full article

    Comments

    • tagpolicy tagpolicy tagpolicy tagcopyright troll tagcopyright troll tagcopyright troll tagdigital millennium copyright act tagdigital millennium copyright act tagdigital millennium copyright act tagdmca takedown tagdmca takedown tagdmca takedown tagnintendo tagnintendo tagnintendo tagyoutube tagyoutube tagyoutube tagyoutubers tagyoutubers tagyoutubers tagpolicy tagpolicy tagpolicy tagcopyright troll tagcopyright troll tagcopyright troll tagdigital millennium copyright act tagdigital millennium copyright act tagdigital millennium copyright act tagdmca takedown tagdmca takedown tagdmca takedown tagnintendo tagnintendo tagnintendo tagyoutube tagyoutube tagyoutube tagyoutubers tagyoutubers tagyoutubers tagpolicy tagpolicy tagpolicy tagcopyright troll tagcopyright troll tagcopyright troll tagdigital millennium copyright act tagdigital millennium copyright act tagdigital millennium copyright act tagdmca takedown tagdmca takedown tagdmca takedown tagnintendo tagnintendo tagnintendo tagyoutube tagyoutube tagyoutube tagyoutubers tagyoutubers tagyoutubers

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