Silicon Valley Anti-Poaching Cartel Went Beyond a Few Tech Firms 137
The gentleman's agreement that several Silicon Valley firms are now widely known to have taken part in to minimize employee poaching within their own circles went much further than has been generally reported, according to a report at PandoDaily. The article lists many other companies besides the handful that have been previously named as taking part in the scheme to prevent recruiting, and gives some insight into what kind of (even non-tech) organizations and practices are involved.
Do the crime, do the time (Score:5, Insightful)
So, can look forward to anyone doing jail time? That is the really the only way this will stop. That or directly start suing the individuals who implemented the policies and make them pay. After that I am willing to bet once a few executives lose their hard won millions will be a little gun shy about conspiring to do anything.
Actually the more I think about it, the best way to reign these practices in is directly suing individuals. Once they can no longer hide behind the corporate veil, the less inclined they will be collude together.
is it illegal? (Score:5, Interesting)
Is it illegal to make these "agreements"?
I think it's ridiculous, and like another pointed out, shows a flaw in capitalism.
It *should* be illegal. IMHO it's an anti-trust issue. Workers are vendors of their labor, and the owners of the capital are colluding, like a 'trust', to monopolize & unnaturally control the scarcity of that capital.
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Anti-trust was setup up to protect the free market for businesses.
The only Labour anti-trust you are going to find is anti-union sentiment.
HO HO HO
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HO HO HO
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It does not restrain ANYONE (Score:2)
It obviously restrains free trade of services by employees and vendors.
Why? It's not saying any employee cannot switch companies. Just that one company agrees not to ASK an employee to switch.
Again, anyone is free to seek work elsewhere with whoever they like.
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I think there may be two elements to it -- one is the criminal aspect (i.e. it is illegal) and the other is the civil (i.e. it has other consequences that could result in a civil class action lawsuit).
Ultimately, I think that even if it is not illegal per se, the affected employees could still file for a civil suit citing any number of reasons. Now will that happen? Probably not.
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The test for weather something is good for capitalism or not is "Does it increase or reduce transparency in the marketplace" If it increases it, then it's good. If it decreases it, then it's bad. Clearly these agreements reduced transparency and closed off parts of the market to both the workers and even the firms involved. The firms were then able to use this secret blacklist against their employees to reduce the rate at which they increased their compensation. The worker would apply and quickly learn that
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It is a restraint of trade [wikipedia.org]. If it was built into a contract it would be unenforceable at the least, probably illegal in many jurisdictions, although some restrictions in employment contracts [wikipedia.org] are enforceable provided they are, "reasonable."
It tells you something that it had to be a gentleman's agreement. I'm sure if they could have legally put it into employment contracts they would have.
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Re:is it illegal? (Score:4, Funny)
Is it illegal to make these "agreements"?
Yes, which is why the DoJ is already well on the track to sentencing, and the companies are begging to broker a deal. And what's more, they've got the dirt on one of the originators of the scheme admitting he knew it was probably illegal and trying to cover his tracks (mens rea [wikipedia.org]).
âoeI would prefer that Omid do it verbally since I donâ(TM)t want to create a paper trail over which we can be sued later? Not sure about this.. thanks Eric [Schmidt]â
Remember that whenever you hear "Do No Evil" -- that was mostly Sergey, and a little bit Larry. Eric Schmidt hates you and masturbates while thinking of doing evil.
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Eric Schmidt is in my top 10 worst people alive. When I say this, people treat me like I am a complete nutjob. I don't think the average Joe (even the average technically savvy Joe) really understands the power he wields from drone policy to dragnet surveillance. The man is a true facist at his very heart, and an enemy of every free man and woman.
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Read the article, yes, and the memo was uncovered during an anti-trust investigation for this practice. The memo is a smoking gun
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Your analogy is wrong.
The "scarce product" here is the labor, and workers own that product. When the owners of that scarce product are colluding to keep its price high, that's called a "labor union". Labor unions and collusion among workers to artificially inflate the price of labor are legal. In fact, in many states, you can be forced to parti
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Your sense of scale is lacking. A corporation with billions of dollars, thousands of employees, and politicians beholden to it offers you a wage to work for it. Your bargaining power is that you might go work elsewhere. If most of the "elsewheres" for your particular skills are similar corporations, and if they have colluded and agreed not to offer you a job just if you already are working at any of them, then once you have that first job, you are no longer free to bargain. You, as a single individual, have
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It has nothing to do with "scale"; the analogy is simply wrong.
Most corporations are small businesses.
Of course it isn't. Unfortunately, that's exactly what our government delivers, foremost the Democrats.
And Democrats deliver cronyism and rent seeking by demonizing business and indiv
stenvar is a GOP troll (Score:2)
This is a ridiculous tangent.
By stenvar's logic a restaurant customer is the "owner" of the product of their hunger and they are selling the access to it...it's backwards.
This is about twisting logic to support a fallacious conclusion.
curse all GOP trolls!
Re:is it illegal? (Score:5, Insightful)
Making employees sign Non-Compete Agreements are illegal in California. But by preventing employees from moving around freely, that could have restricted them from getting pay rises and consequently depriving the state and federal government from getting income taxes.
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depriving the state and federal government from getting income taxes.
Not exactly. Either the company will pay the taxes, or they pay the employee more, claim that as a deduction, and the employee pays the taxes.
Yes the tax rate for the employee and the company will be different (which is why I said not exactly) and the company might find other loopholes to hide the money. But that is a separate issue.
Re:is it illegal? (Score:4, Interesting)
* Multiple times I have had companies explicitly tell me they can't hire me because my current employer would retaliate against them.
* A manager offered me a position, but then called me back and told me that HR told him he could not hire me because of a secret inter-company agreement, neither I nor the manager knew anything about, that prohibited him from hiring any of my employer's employees.
* I have personally seen a company to company contract which stated that neither company will hire each other company's employees.
These non-compete agreements between companies are well know and common, these companies have never been prosecuted, and these companies have no fear of prosecution.
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The thing is, anti-poaching agreements do not cover freely applying for jobs at other companies under the agreement.
All an anti-poaching agreement says is that companies in the agreement will not actively solicit employees from companies in the
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Nobody is prevented from "moving around". All these companies do is agree not to actively recruit from each other via cold calls. Believe me, employees move between them all the time.
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.
Poor and steal a chocolate bar - Jail time...
Rich and steal $1MM - you are required to do community service and teach a 1 hour ethics course.
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Re:Do the crime, do the time (Score:5, Insightful)
The executives essentially formed their own union. The gentlemen's agreement (which is anything but. A crony capitalists agreement is a better name for it) is simply their by-laws.
To counter this, every tech worker in the entire valley should form their own union and stick it to the fucking executives for a change. I moved from the valley 15 years ago because of shit like this. I'll never return but would love to see these mother fuckers get what is coming to them.
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Well, except if you RTFA, it appears to have applied to executives and sales staff, not engineers. From the google document:
"3. Additionally, there are no restrictions at any level for engineering candidates."
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You are mixing up things. "Crony capitalism" is when government hands out favors to private parties. The Obama administration has been heavily engaged in crony capitalism, even more so than the Bush administration.
You also don't understand what this agreement is about. It's not an agreemen not-to-hire, it's merely an agreement not-to-cold-call. If you work for Google and want to g
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When they kept on questioning him, he straightened up and said to them, "Let any one of you who is without sin be the first to throw a stone at her.
For a moment... (Score:2)
I thought this was about an agreement to not support anyone who goes on grey-market safaris, etc. to protect endangered species...
Another factoring in increasing H-1Bs (Score:1)
And so much cheaper than having to pay what employees are actually worth.
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Collusion vs no solicit (Score:4, Insightful)
The article mixes two things:
Collusion between the companies to not recruit from each other, which is apparently illegal (since the DOJ stepped in).
No solicit agreement with employees. That's part of a contract, I'll hire you but you have to agree that you won't refer my other employees to the headhunter who placed you. That's pretty standard and presumably is legal.
Re: Collusion vs no solicit (Score:5, Insightful)
Not in California it isn't, same with non completes. Edwards decision killed non-solicits. You want capitalism then have captialism and make sure you pay your employees well.
http://www.hrthatworksblog.com/2013/01/30/the-difficulty-of-enforcing-non-solicitation-clauses-in-california/
Re:Collusion vs no solicit (Score:5, Interesting)
The "legal" method that's fairly standard is the other way around. The temp agency places you, and you work for them. The company hiring the temp agency agrees not to hire you for a term... 6 months to 2 years depending, because the temp agency needs to recoup the cost of scouting you. Often there's a clause where the hiring company can buy their way out of it if they really want you bad or they're afraid you could just go to a 3rd party. All of this is pretty standard and legal because everyone knows what they're getting into. But, if unknown to you, every other party has made a secret agreement with the original company not to hire you, you're screwed. There's no-where to go and you're no longer dealing with a free market. You're being forced to abide by a contract that you never signed and don't even know exists.
Gentleman's Agrees Are Hard to Prove (Score:1)
Should be pretty obvious, but nothing gets written down. To do anything they would need years of collecting testimony. The companies could just say that was a few CEO's ago and disavow all knowledge.
I wish I were oppressed (Score:5, Funny)
Apparently, none of the companies I've ever worked for were on that list, because I'm hounded by clueless recruiters every week.
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You're probably not high enough on the totem pole -- my take from reading that article was that the collusion targeted poaching of high-value employees whose loss would hurt the company in question.
Individual contributors, by their very nature, are usually not worth the concern (except in rare cases).
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Yeah, I'll get right on that... I'm still a little busy replying to every spam e-mail I get, telling them I'm not interested and asking them to remove me from their mailing list. Once I get that finished up, and don't get any more spam, I'll switch over to recruiters.
Have you seriously not talked to a recruiter in the past 5 years? There's a horde of (I'm guessing: Pakistani?) 3rd world "recruiters" that call up the phone numbers of EVERY
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If things keep going this way, I suppose I'll be permanently unemployed in just a few years, and unable to find jobs, even if there's an opening across the street from me.
Yeah, unfortunately; skill #1 of finding a job is actually finding a job to apply for.
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Like MS and Borland (Score:3)
I remember when I worked for Borland we used to joke that we were Microsoft's training site they poached so many people. From what I understand in one of the MS/Borland lawsuits Borland got no-poaching added as part of the settlement.
Comment removed (Score:3)
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We're some of the highest-paid workers in the country.
Imagine how much we could be paid if they hadn't colluded.
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Yup, same here (well, not Apple but a different company that was mentioned and have totally gotten cold-called by Google). Based on the documents in TFA, it appears that the agreements were mostly about cold-calling and didn't apply to engineering staff. This seems mostly to be about executive staff and salesforce.
Now, excuse me while I play the world's tiniest violin for those executives at major tech companies that had their salaries suppressed.
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Look at this clause from the article:
3. Additionally, there are no restrictions at any level for engineering candidates.
That's interesting because it suggests it's non-tech-wages being held down. It would still be blatantly illegal I think, but it undermines much of the rhetoric about this issue. Doesn't completely destroy it -- some agreements might have that for engineering candidates.
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From TFA:
"“For each of these ‘Restricted Hiring’ companies, Google has agreed to the following protocol.
1. Not to pursue manager level and above candidates for Product, Sales, or G&A roles — even if they have applied to Google;
2. However, there are no restrictions to our recruiting from these companies at individual contributor levels for PSG
3. Additionally, there are no restrictions at any level for engineering candidates."
Point 1 will probably get them in trouble, but point 3 m
SV gets what SV deserves (Score:1)
I often wonder what supposed geniuses want to live there. SF is a dirty shit hole that costs 4-5 times more to live there. NYC in a tiny apartment is great for your twenties and I can totally understand that. Senior positions for 100-150k in SF? Yeah right. You can get that in most parts of the US. I am not suggesting to move to Iowa or Nebraska. There are plenty of tech cities out there if you want to keep your options. Maybe some of those lazy VCs will get a clue and hop on more planes. They shou
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Forcing concentration of tech people is GOOD economics.
It's how you keep the peons working for pennies while you get home every night and richer every hour
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The majority of those "Parsec away" peons work for less than 1/3 what an equally educated Wall Street Statistics Manipulator makes.
Meanwhile, the average CEO is making more than 250x what the peons is making.
And, where are MOST of those STEM workers now?
In Bangalore and Hyderbad and Chengdu, working for $18K U.S.D. if they can get it.
I agree, most of the people working TEMP make a good living...until the new software version comes out and then "sorry, not current"
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A perfect example of why Unions are required (Score:1)
The defenders of the thieves are Judas Goats or Chauvinists, singing the Praises of the Emperors until they starve to death themselves, hoping for a greater reward for loyalty.
Here's a hint chumps.
Loyalty in Capitalism goes ONLY up, never down.
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They demand, you fight back, a compromise is reached
you have something against dickering?
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Their job is to neutralize the advantage the 1% have in owning more than the whole bottom 80% put together, so people can vote WITHOUT FEAR of reprisal.
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List of Companies (Score:4, Insightful)
which the TFS failed to include, as contacted by the publisher:
AMD
AOL
Adecco
Adobe
Apple
Best Buy
CDI Business Solutions
Cingular/AT&T
Clear Channel
Comcast
Dell
Dreamworks
eBay/PayPal
Foxconn
Genentech
Google
IBM
Illumita Inc.
Intel
Intuit
Jcrew
Kelly
Kforce
Lucasfilm
Mac Zone
Microsoft
Nike
Novell
Nvidia
Oglivy
OpenTV
Oracle
PC Connection
PC Mall
Pixar
Sun Microsystems
Virgin Media
WPP
It would be interesting to see the connectedness of the Boards of Directors graph for the set.
Class warfare (Score:2)
What a good example of class warfare! Those company fight each other every day, with dozens of patent lawsuits, but when it comes to limit worker wealth, they manage to work together.
I worked for HP in Silicon valley in the early 90s (Score:3)
They used to actually tell employees in big meetings of engineers where they announced the annual pay raises. First they'd give a powerpoint presentation on their benefits packages, etc., and explain that their HR people had met with HR people from other big engineering employers in Silicon Valley and elsewhere to agree upon job titles and descriptions and pay scales. Finally they'd announce the annual raise and everyone would cheer except me, who didn't like being told "don't bother looking for a better deal, we've seen to it that you won't get one".
I ultimately left HP and went to Fujitsu, a company that wasn't part of the "cartel" and got a pay raise of 50% and kept all my hard earned vacation time to boot. I haven't seen any mention of HP in any of the articles about this yet.
"Gentlemen's Agreement" (Score:3)
Please stop calling this a "Gentleman's agreement. Those engaged in this practice are not "gentlemen".
Any shock why these are Obama boosters? (Score:1)
A frozen top down controlled job market where the employee has zero input or freedom but most likely a great deal of security as they are locked in place. At least until HR decides they should eat dogfood somewhere else.
Hhhhhh (Score:1)
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Ah, yes, the "no true capitalism" defense. The final and greatest argument Randroids resort to when faced with the reality of their idiotic beliefs.
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Re:Capitalism at its finest (Score:4, Insightful)
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It's a free market not a free-for-all market. Get your terminology right before you start with your rhetoric. We have laws like anti-monopoly, property rights, insider trading and such that ensure competitiveness and free market principals. That's Captialism. These Corporate scum deserve to have the book thrown at them because they are undermining those principals for their own advantage.
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The system you describe is closer to mercantilism than it is to capitalism. In capitalism, whatever is beneficial to me is good.
By that logic, I I were to engage in loan-sharking and racketeering, those are good because they benefit me (so long as I can get away with it, of course). In fact, if I had the power to change the law so that I can get away with it, then that would be good as well.
See, there is good, and there is right. Knowing or ignoring the difference indicates more the type of person you are than the economic system that is in place.
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I'm not an hypocrite, and I will tell you why.
I am a dirty lazy bastard who steal, lie, and cheat. I am responsible for the depletion of earth's natural resource, exploitation of third world countries and the misery of a lot of human being, but you know what ? Not only it feels good, but I sure don't want to lose any of this, and above all, I am no different than 850 millions people in the EU and US.
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The WORKERS are made unfree by this cooperation.
Try again!
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/F... [wikipedia.org]
There are few things that companies can't do in a free market. But when companies collude to form a "price setting monopoly" (and that's what these agreements are in
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Capitalism is free market, all the player are free to interact as they please, might it be by competing or by cooperating.
No. Once they start cooperating, it is no longer Capitalism. Capitalism is defined by competition. Freedom of interaction is something you are adding... incorrectly I might add.
Re:Capitalism at its finest (Score:5, Insightful)
Capitalism is whatever rehtorically useful construct I define it to be. For example, today, capitalism is a system for distracting me from my overloaded inbox to post on Slashdot. Capitalism is the oppressive system that prevents me from sleeping in on the weekends.
What's your Capitalism today?
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That's not capitalism.
We don't actually do capitalism here in America, it's just not profitable.
America is to capitalism what China is to communism.
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No see that's just the thing, it is capitalism.
Anti-trust laws are actually anti-capitalist.
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Capitalists certainly.
Criminals as well.
Monopolists too...but then I repeat myself
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or find a few hundred thousand suckers to pay for your first 3 failures (think Bush)
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Oh, and the MAJORITY voted Gore in Florida, too. See NORC results for proof
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No, Bush II was elected only once (2004). The first time was a judicial coronation un-ironically pushed into the Federal courts by the "state's rights" party, who trampled Florida's state's rights (and black letter law) about recounts (specifically, there were provisions of Florida law which the Feds stepped in and stopped).
Speaking as a resident of Florida (at the time), it is incredibly funny to me that the GOP shill who did the RNC's dirty work in FL (Sec. of State Katherine Harris, who was also Bush's F
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Yeah, they voluntarily entered into agreements with companies that conspired to ensure that no one could make more by going to any other company. No, you can't hold out for more. You have a life to live and bills to pay. You have to take what is available, even if it is crap because you gotta eat.
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Don't worry, the airwaves will soon be flooded with commercials from lawyers you can call to get in on the action.