Why Microsoft Has Accepted Unions, Unlike Its Rivals
https://www.nytimes.com/2024/02/25/business/economy/microsoft-corporate-progressive-labor.html
Once again a juggernaut thanks to artificial intelligence, Microsoft has worked to shed its strong-arm image. Is there a catch?
By Noam Scheiber
Published Feb. 25, 2024Updated Feb. 26, 2024
The December day in 2021 that set off a revolution across the videogame industry appeared to start innocuously enough. Managers at a Wisconsin studio called Raven began meeting one by one with quality assurance testers, who vet video games for bugs, to announce that the company was overhauling their department. Going forward, managers said, the lucky testers would be permanent employees, not temps. They would earn an extra $1.50 an hour.
It was only later in the morning, a Friday, that the catch became apparent: One-third of the studios roughly 35 testers were being let go as part of the overhaul. The workers were stunned. Raven was owned by Activision Blizzard, one of the industrys largest companies, and there appeared to be plenty of work to go around. Several testers had just worked late into the night to meet a looming deadline.
My friend called me crying, saying, I just lost my job, recalled Erin Hall, one of the testers who stayed on. None of us saw that coming.
The testers conferred with one another over the weekend and announced a strike on Monday. Just after they returned to work seven weeks later, they filed paperwork to hold a union election. Raven never rehired the laid-off workers, but the other testers won their election in May 2022, forming the first union at a major U.S. video game company.
FULL story at link above.