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multiplewolves@lemmy.world ⁨1⁩ ⁨week⁩ ago

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Dec. 26, 2025

Five weeks into a strike at the crowdfunding site Kickstarter this fall, employees were getting anxious. Their union’s strike fund was dwindling, making it harder for some to cover living expenses, and they were unsure if the company would make more concessions.

In a sign of their desperation, some employees redoubled their efforts to raise money for the fund through QR codes on their phones. A Kickstarter engineer, Dannel Jurado, collected a few hundred dollars at a victory party for Zohran Mamdani, the New York City mayor-elect.

But the next week, Kickstarter made offers the union would accept, creating a new minimum-salary formula and helping to preserve a beloved four-day workweek. The shift caught striking employees by surprise and brought an end to the work stoppage.

“Once we had an agreement on the last article, it was like, ‘OK, so what do we do now?’” Mr. Jurado said. “Does that mean we have work on Thursday?”

Over the past few years, U.S. tech companies have laid off hundreds of thousands of employees in a retreat from a pandemic-era hiring spree and an effort to free up cash to invest in artificial intelligence. Many executives have applauded the ruthless management style of entrepreneurs like Elon Musk.

Even tech companies once thought of as relatively progressive, like Google and Microsoft, have firedemployeeswho have protested over political causes. The companies said the protests were disruptive and potentially unsafe.

But tech worker activism has continued amid the crackdown, albeit more cautiously. “It’s driving the organizing underground, but people are organizing,” said Emily Mazo, a Ph.D. student at Columbia University who studies tech work and tech worker activism.

The Manhattan offices of Google, which offered buyout packages this year. A union of the company’s employees had opposed layoffs. 

Credit…

Natalie Keyssar for The New York Times

Google offered thousands of voluntary exit packages this year after the Alphabet Workers Union, named for Google’s parent company, launched a campaign calling for improvements in job security, like a shift away from involuntary layoffs. A Google spokesperson said that the campaign had not influenced the company and that it had listened to employees directly through internal channels.

After Amazon laid off 14,000 workersthis fall, hundreds of employees signed an open letter to management seeking a bigger say in how to carry out layoffs that may result from A.I.

And over the past two years, a wave of unionizing in the video game industry that began with low-paid testers spread to designers and engineers, who joined unions at the Microsoft-owned studios that make games like FalloutDoom and World of Warcraft. A group called the Tech Workers Coalition saw the number of subscribers to its newsletter grow to nearly 7,000, from about 4,000, during the same period, according to data shared by an organizer. The list includes many current and former employees of big tech companies.

This persistent activism has to do with a longer-term shift in how engineers and other tech workers see themselves. For decades, they identified as high-skilled professionals who stood apart from the usual management-labor divide. They were well compensated, could change jobs easily and had the freedom to allocate their time as they saw fit. Because of generous stock grants, many thought of themselves as co-owners of their companies, even future founders and investors, making them unlikely candidates to join labor unions.

But these days, with the notable exception of those atop the A.I. wave, more and more tech employees see themselves as rank-and-file workers stuck in a conventional conflict with management, according to interviews with workers and organizers. And few companies epitomize that shift more than Kickstarter.

The Tech Worker Awakening

Like many white-collar workers who end up in a labor dispute, the Kickstarter employees didn’t start off wanting a union. What they wanted was to beat up Nazis, in a manner of speaking.

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