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Facebook Follows Google To End Mandatory Arbitration For Sexual-Harassment Claims (cnbc.com) 72

An anonymous reader quotes a report from CNBC: Facebook on Friday became the latest tech company to end a policy of requiring employees to settle claims of sexual harassment through private arbitration, according to a report by the Wall Street Journal. It will now allow employees to take these types of claims to court. Tech companies have long used arbitration as a method for handling instances of sexual harassment to prevent employees from suing them in court, but that's starting to change. Facebook's move comes shortly after a similar move this week by Google, which came after thousands of its employees walked out in protest last week over its handling of sexual harassment complaints. Additionally, Facebook changed its policy on office dating and will now require employees who are director level or higher to disclose if they are dating a colleague, the report said. Previously, the company only required disclosure if an employee was dating someone they supervised, according to the report.
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Facebook Follows Google To End Mandatory Arbitration For Sexual-Harassment Claims

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  • by Anonymous Coward on Friday November 09, 2018 @07:31PM (#57620226)

    This is nothing but Virtue Signaling. Nothing. You ALWAYS had the right to pursue legal remedies outside your employer. If people actually READ the contracts they signed for Employment they'd realize it's a farse because much of it is invalid but they put the language there expecting most people to not question it.

    • You're a liar.

      If you're an Uber driver in California for instance, you would have won the recent class lawsuit against Uber (if not for the arbitration clause).

      As it stands, only the drivers that had the presence of mind to opt-out of arbitration within a specific time limit won that case, but that's only a tiny fraction of them.

      • You're a liar.

        If you're an Uber driver in California for instance, you would have won the recent class lawsuit against Uber (if not for the arbitration clause).

        As it stands, only the drivers that had the presence of mind to opt-out of arbitration within a specific time limit won that case, but that's only a tiny fraction of them.

        To be ware, it's plausible the grandparent is bizzaro Hanlon's Razor... uninformed, as opposed to malice-driven.

  • by b0s0z0ku ( 752509 ) on Friday November 09, 2018 @07:32PM (#57620228)

    Typical American Puritanism -- they want to control what employees do with each other, on their own damn time, outside of work. Hope this new intrusive policy leads to massive lawsuits for privacy violation.

    Picture this -- two employees in different departments start dating. Boss has a crush on one of them, and they disclose whom they're dating. Let the shitshow begin.

    US employers are far too intrusive as to employees' personal lives.

    • Why should they disclose anything other than !INTERESTED_KXTHBAI?

    • by Anonymous Coward

      Actually many countries and corporations have policies like this because a senior employee can have de-facto control over subordinate employees which can cause all sorts of problems like basically unreported rape and things.

      This is a huge problem in many countries where a lot of new interns (younger girls) basically find out soon that either they must sleep with a superior or quit. And in these same countries quitting or getting fired is basically equivalent to being unemployable.

      • Actually many countries and corporations have policies like this because a senior employee can have de-facto control over subordinate employees which can cause all sorts of problems like basically unreported rape and things.

        This is a huge problem in many countries where a lot of new interns (younger girls) basically find out soon that either they must sleep with a superior or quit. And in these same countries quitting or getting fired is basically equivalent to being unemployable.

        Spot on.

        I would add that the social trend towards equality of the sexes has improved society to the point where

        a lot of new interns

        doesn't mean a club of exclusively younger or even just girls.

        The perks of power have traditionally, in Weinsteinian fashion, afforded superiors sexual power over their subordinates.

    • Typical American Puritanism -- they want to control what employees do with each other, on their own damn time, outside of work. Hope this new intrusive policy leads to massive lawsuits for privacy violation.

      There's nothing "American" or "outside of work" about any of this. Conflict of interest office relationships affect the workplace directly. This is also standard in pretty much every large company regardless of where they are based.

      Picture this -- two employees in different departments start dating. Boss has a crush on one of them, and they disclose whom they're dating. Let the shitshow begin.

      Nice dooms day scenario. Unfortunately for you these kinds of situations and scenarios are incredibly rare and in many cases don't work out well for the Boss.

      US employers are far too intrusive as to employees' personal lives.

      The only thing intrusive here was the forced arbitration. In the rest of what we have been discussing the past few weeks,

  • then you go to the police. g00gle and Farcebook cannot prevent you from that no matter what contract they make you sign. Otherwise the only reason for this is dollar$$$$$. g00gle and facebook will gladly lose money to virtue signal about this because we've finally found something corporations care more about than money and its spreading the SJW religious cult.
    • Oh it's the "herp derp crime" meme that's been coming up like clockwork in every single one of these posts.

      You seem to have forgotten that your country has two forms of courts, criminal and civil. This post pertains only to the civil form.

      You also seem to have an immense and misplaced amount of faith in the police. You may recall in fact that multiple people had gone to the police over Bill Crosby for example before the whole thing broke, and none of them had any luck for decades.

      • by Jarwulf ( 530523 )
        So ending mandatory arbitration is going to solve the supposed problem of police ignoring rape victims? Lol.
  • by cerberusss ( 660701 ) on Saturday November 10, 2018 @01:35AM (#57621012) Journal

    It will now allow employees to take these types of claims to court

    Oh my goshm, thank you so much, corporate overlord!

    Seriously, something along the way went very, very wrong here. We allowed the company we work for, take away basic civil rights.

  • It's never a company that is at the disadvantage.

The 11 is for people with the pride of a 10 and the pocketbook of an 8. -- R.B. Greenberg [referring to PDPs?]

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