1 – Breaking News & Latest Updates 2026
Skip to main content

Labor Archive

Archives for December 2022

Richard Lawler
Richard Lawler
Workers at Activision Blizzard’s Proletariat studio are organizing.

Less than a month after a second group of Activision Blizzard workers voted to unionize, the Communications Workers of America announced the latest group filing for a union representation election.

The 57 workers in the unit include animators, designers, engineers, producers and quality assurance workers. Earlier this year, quality assurance workers at Activision’s Raven Software studio in Wisconsin and Blizzard Albany won their union elections, despite Activision Blizzard’s repeated attempts to prevent workers from voting.

“Everyone in the video game industry knows Activision Blizzard’s reputation for creating a hostile work environment, so earlier this year, when we heard that Blizzard was planning to acquire Proletariat, we started to discuss how we could protect the great culture we have created here,” said Dustin Yost, a Software Engineer at Proletariat. “By forming a union and negotiating a contract, we can make sure that we are able to continue doing our best work and create innovative experiences at the frontier of game development.”

Mitchell Clark
Mitchell Clark
Micron will cut 10 percent of its workforce next year.

The chipmaker announced the plan as part of its earnings report on Wednesday, saying the reduction would come from “a combination of voluntary attrition” and layoffs throughout 2023. The company also won’t be doing bonuses next year and says that executive salaries will be cut too.

Micron recently reported it has 48,000 employees, according to CNBC, meaning around 4,800 positions could be affected.

Mitchell Clark
Mitchell Clark
Apple’s facing another accusation of breaking labor laws.

The Communications Workers of America accused Apple of breaking labor laws at a store in Columbus, Ohio, saying the tech giant held mandatory anti-union meetings and tried to shift organizing activities to a labor group it had control over. You can read the full complaint below.

The union has filed several charges against Apple for its actions at different retail locations — and the National Labor Relations Board has found merit to a few of them.

Emma Roth
Emma Roth
Elon Musk reportedly threatens to sue Twitter employees who leak information to the press.

An email obtained by Platformer’s Zoë Schiffer warns employees that Twitter will “immediately seek damages” if they violate their non-disclosure agreements.

According to Schiffer, Musk says employees will “get the response they deserve” if they send “detailed info to the media.” Musk is asking workers to sign a pledge indicating that they understand the policy, which they’re reportedly expected to return by the end of the day today.

Mitchell Clark
Mitchell Clark
Some ex-Meta employees say they’re not getting full severance.

A group of former Meta employees say they’re only receiving eight weeks of base pay and three months of COBRA as severance — half of what CEO Mark Zuckerberg promised when the mass-layoffs were announced, according to CNBC.

The full-time, non-contract workers, who were in a Meta apprenticeship program, say the company hasn’t responded to their questions with an answer on whether the discrepancy is intentional.

Mitchell Clark
Mitchell Clark
The St. Louis Apple union election would’ve failed.

Last month, the International Association of Machinists and Aerospace Workers union announced that it was canceling its union drive at an Apple Store in St. Louis. Now, 66 of the store’s 90 employees have said they wouldn’t want to join the union, and have no interest in doing so in the future, according to Bloomberg.

The employees say their decision wasn’t because of pressure from management, which unions have alleged in the past.