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Google Businesses

Google Cuts Hundreds of Jobs in Engineering and Other Divisions (nytimes.com) 176

Google laid off hundreds of workers in several divisions Wednesday night, seeking to lower expenses as it focuses on artificial intelligence and joining a wave of other companies cutting tech jobs this year. From a report: The Silicon Valley company laid off employees in its core engineering division, as well as those working on the Google Assistant, a voice-operated virtual assistant, and in the hardware division that makes the Pixel phone, Fitbit watches and Nest thermostat, three people with knowledge of the cuts said. Several hundred employees from the company's core engineering organization lost corporate access and received notices that their roles were eliminated, two of the people said.

"We've had to make some difficult decisions about ongoing employment of some Google employees and we regret to inform you that your position is being eliminated," the company told some workers in the division, according to text reviewed by The New York Times. Google confirmed the Assistant cuts, earlier reported by Semafor, and the hardware layoffs. "We're responsibly investing in our company's biggest priorities and the significant opportunities ahead," a Google spokesman said in a statement. After cuts throughout the second half of 2023, "some teams are continuing to make these kinds of organizational changes, which include some role eliminations globally."

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Google Cuts Hundreds of Jobs in Engineering and Other Divisions

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  • "We're sinking captain, our AI gets made fun of, our main product sucks, and mean people are winning lawsuits against our monopoly, what do we do?" "We're too heavy, throw sailors overboard until the problem is fixed!"
    • by Opportunist ( 166417 ) on Thursday January 11, 2024 @05:22AM (#64149135)

      Like in the old joke where the two companies have a rowing competition and one loses by miles. Consultants are called and after 3 months of filling whiteboards, they find the reason: The winning team had a cox and 8 rowers, in the losing boat there were 8 cox and a rower.

      The recommendation was to reprimand the rower and to demand higher effort.

      In the next competition, the distance was even worse.

      So the rower got fired.

  • by redback ( 15527 ) on Thursday January 11, 2024 @03:22AM (#64148971)

    Does this mean they will stop rearranging the Android UI for no reason?

    • by Calydor ( 739835 )

      Absolutely.

      The reason will now be, "This is what our generative AI suggested the UI should look like this week."

    • by caseih ( 160668 )

      And maybe give me back the about to set my own colors instead of using pastel shades based on my background picture. Why Google thinks my colors should be based on the background color I have no idea. It certainly doesn't work with my background image. I definitely don't want my whole ui pink like it is now. Sigh. Google.

  • by flyingfsck ( 986395 ) on Thursday January 11, 2024 @05:59AM (#64149197)
    I’m sure all the redundant coders will quickly learn how to shovel coal.
  • "Google laid off hundreds of workers in several divisions Wednesday night, seeking to lower expenses as it focuses on artificial intelligence..."

    Don't you just love it when we read all those stories selling the idea that AI isn't going to have a measurable impact on human employment...as companies are literally laying off humans in order to focus on the very thing that (allegedly) isn't going to impact human employment.

    I'd probably be more irritated over the demise of the human race by thy own ignorant hand...if we weren't so damn deserving of it.

    • by Somervillain ( 4719341 ) on Thursday January 11, 2024 @10:45AM (#64149687)

      "Google laid off hundreds of workers in several divisions Wednesday night, seeking to lower expenses as it focuses on artificial intelligence..."

      Don't you just love it when we read all those stories selling the idea that AI isn't going to have a measurable impact on human employment...as companies are literally laying off humans in order to focus on the very thing that (allegedly) isn't going to impact human employment.

      I'd probably be more irritated over the demise of the human race by thy own ignorant hand...if we weren't so damn deserving of it.

      I don't believe CEOs when they say AI is impacting their company. I think it's a convenient excuse to make corrections and say it's an industry-wide reorientation towards the future...rather than admit that there were strategic mistakes by leadership. Pinchai is leading them to the next great thing!!!!...not correcting his many mistakes!!!...this is a march towards the future, not a reflection of his failing as an overpaid CEO.

      Google used to be exciting...10 years ago. Now barely anyone cares. Everyone I knew on Android was excited about their offerings. All those people now have iPhones. We used to be excited about their tablets and they let it die....then there's the worn-out complaint about them killing things at the drop of the hat. We can spin our wheels on the details, but the bottom line is nearly everyone thinks Google is in decline. Some of it is unavoidable...cellphone hardware and displays can only advance so far...most of it is strategic failure from their leadership and it started happening once the new CEO came on board.

      I predict many more AI-related job cuts...not because AI is so beneficial, but because it keeps investors happy. In my view, these people were going to be let go regardless, but by spinning AI narratives, they can say they're investing in the future instead of failing strategically in the past. People who actually know what they're doing haven't proclaimed staff cuts due to AI.

      I predict AI is harmful and dangerous...not because it will take away real jobs, but because it will enable scams and fraud at an unprecedented scale....just wait till we have political campaigns where all the materials were created by generative AI!!...as well as elaborate phishing sites, crypto scams, etc.

    • AI will not have a measurable impact on human employment....long term. Where 'long term' is defined as whatever period is necessary for the statement to be proven.
  • It would be interesting to see how long it takes for these folks to find another job. After all, for decades all we've heard is employers, particulary in IT, can't find people to fill positions. If folks with this pedegree (one assumes you have to have at least two brain cells to work at Google) aren't hired relatively quickly, it's not that companies can't find people to fill jobs, it's that they're lying.

    Perhaps companies should stop using that expensive crappy software to filter applicants and they'd fi

    • The problem isn't being out of a job. The people laid off get severance and will have bulletproof resumes. They will be fine. The problem is the morale of everyone else will take a huge hit, as will the company's reputation. The best engineers may leave or just not apply in the first place. Velocity will slow down exactly when it needs to increase. It's a flawed business strategy.
  • Remember this (Score:4, Insightful)

    by Dictator For Life ( 8829 ) on Thursday January 11, 2024 @09:24AM (#64149481) Homepage
    "It's not personal, it's just good business." Yes, they demanded your total loyalty and even your bodily health, but throwing you under the bus is good business. You are bad for business now, so take a walk. What a monstrous philosophy that is.
    • For the last three decades, I've lived and worked knowing that this principle is true. As a result, I never let them take my "total loyalty" or free time or health. I gave them the time they were paying me for, not my whole life. When I sign off at suppertime, I'm done, I don't look at my work computer again until the next day. And guess what, this practice hasn't heart my career in the least.

  • by RUs1729 ( 10049396 ) on Thursday January 11, 2024 @09:33AM (#64149507)
    The difficult decisions would have been to reduce positions and emoluments at the top management level, most of whose members are little more than dead weight anyway.
  • by Turkinolith ( 7180598 ) on Thursday January 11, 2024 @11:10AM (#64149745)
    That companies are not worth your "loyalty", they will drop you whenever they see a business need and you should be prepared to do the same.
  • by bjdevil66 ( 583941 ) on Thursday January 11, 2024 @11:37AM (#64149819)

    Good IT employees rarely get laid off by healthy companies/orgs, and management is always looking to cut loose employees they want to lose. "AI hiring" is just the latest, more culturally palatable premise to do it under.

    If you're laid off from an IT position in a large org (including Google), you've probably done at least four of the following five things:

    1) -- The worst thing you can do -- You stayed too long in the same position.
    2) You made too much money (probably due to small raises over time while doing said job).
    3) You didn't adapt to changes happening in the IT world, both inside and outside your company/group.
    4) You pissed off and/or embarrassed someone with actual power in the not-too-distant past.
    5) You grew too old (unavoidable).

  • LLMs are an existential threat to Google's core business of search. Any greater degree of understanding a question will lead to better search results. If Google can't keep up with MS, they are going down.

    • Yup, there are many areas where LLMs will totally disrupt the industry. Fiction writing, advertising, political speech writing, technical manuals, music - the list goes on and on.

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