Gentlemen's attack on workers
Summary: Details of correspondence between Jobs and Schmidt reveal how deep the price-fixing over workers (fixing the salaries lower) really goes
WE recently learned how Google and Apple had screwed engineers and drove their wages down by colluding. We posted some news links about it. Well, now there are unsealed documents showing us sociopaths at work.
Apple is an undisputed king of evil, but watch Google's Schmidt acting not much better than Steve Jobs, who is laughing at the firing of staff (guess who's fired in Hell right now). To quote some background to this: "In early March, 2007, as Google was expanding fast and furiously, one of its recruiters from the “Google.com Engineering” group made a career-ending mistake: She cold-contacted an Apple engineer by email, violating the secret and illegal non-solicitation compact that her boss, Eric Schmidt, had agreed with Apple’s Steve Jobs.
"What happened next is just one of many specific examples of how people’s lives were impacted by the Techtopus wage-theft cartel that was taken down by the Department of Justice antitrust division, and is currently being litigated in a landmark class action lawsuit.
"The Google recruiter’s email—in which she identified herself as “a Recruiter for the ‘Google.com Engineering’ team formerly known as the ‘Site Reliability Engineering’ team”— was sent out on the morning of March 7, 2007."
Seeing how those companies have colluded and the executives never sent to prison (let alone put on trial) helps us remember that we live in a society where corporations are above the law and white-collar business crimes are so commonplace that we take them for granted (banks are a good example of it). Watch
this other news report where iFixit boss Wiens is quote as saying: "They [Apple] have done everything they can to put these guys [third-party repairers] out of business."
Also mind
this new article which floats Microsoft lobbyist
Florian Müller's
old FUD, saying that "Apple wants Samsung to pony up $40 per smartphone for patents."
At this stage, to be absolutely frank, defending Google from Apple's aggressive litigation and
Steve Jobs' thermonuclear delusions seems like an exercise in futility. Google is
starting to do evil not just in patent practice and law; the company which was once hailed as the best place to work with is not an enemy of IT workers. Just ask Tim Bray (a manager in Android) why he quit Google earlier this year.
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