We’re living in the #enshittocene, in which the forces of enshittification are turning everything from our cars to our streaming services to our dishwashers into thoroughly enshittifified piles of shit. Call it the Great Enshittening:

https://pluralistic.net/2023/11/09/lead-me-not-into-temptation/#chamberlain

If you’d like an essay-formatted version of this thread to read or share, here’s a link to it on pluralistic.net, my surveillance-free, ad-free, tracker-free blog:

https://pluralistic.net/2024/01/13/solidarity-forever/#tech-unions

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  • Cory Doctorow@mamot.frOP
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    8 months ago

    This made tech workers very exploitable: their bosses could sell them on the idea that they were doing something heroic, which warranted “extremely hardcore” expectations - working 16 hour days, sleeping under your desk, sacrificing your health, your family and your personal life to meet deadlines and ship products (“Real artists ship” - S. Jobs).

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    • Cory Doctorow@mamot.frOP
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      8 months ago

      But the flip side of this appeal to heroism is that it only worked to the extent that it convinced workers to genuinely care about the things they made. When you miss you mother’s funeral and pass on having kids in order to meet deadline and ship a product, the prospect of making that product worse is unthinkable.

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    • Cory Doctorow@mamot.frOP
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      8 months ago

      But the flip side of this appeal to heroism is that it only worked to the extent that it convinced workers to genuinely care about the things they made. When you miss you mother’s funeral and pass on having kids in order to meet deadline and ship a product, the prospect of making that product worse is unthinkable.

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      • Cory Doctorow@mamot.frOP
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        8 months ago

        Confronted by the moral injury of enshittifying a product you care about, harming the users you see yourself as representing, many tech workers balked at the prospect. Because tech workers were scarce - and because there were plenty of employment prospects for workers who quit - they could actually prevent their bosses from making their products worse:

        But those days are behind us, too. Mass tech worker layoffs have gutted tech workers’ confidence.

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        • Cory Doctorow@mamot.frOP
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          8 months ago

          When Google lays off 12,000 tech workers just months after a stock buyback that would have paid their wages for the next 27 years, they deliver two benefits to their shareholders. It’s not just the short-term gains from the financial engineering - there’s the long-term gain of gutting worker power and stripping away the final impediment to enshittification:

          No matter how strong an individual tech worker’s bargaining power was, it was always brittle.

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          • Cory Doctorow@mamot.frOP
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            8 months ago

            Long before googlers were being laid off in five-digit cohorts, they were working in an environment where harassment and predation were just part of the job. The 20,000+ googlers who walked off the job in 2018 were an important step towards replacing the system where each tech worker’s power was limited to their moment-to-moment importance to their bosses’ plans with a new system based on a collective identity.

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            • Cory Doctorow@mamot.frOP
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              8 months ago

              Only through collective action and solidarity - unions - could tech workers hope to truly resist all the moral injuries of their bosses enshittification imperatives. No surprise then, that tech unions are on the rise:

              But what is a little surprising - and very heartening! - is what happens when techies start to self-identify as workers: they come to understand that they share common cause with the other workers at the bottom of the tech stack.

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              • Cory Doctorow@mamot.frOP
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                8 months ago

                Think of Amazon’s tech workers walking out in solidarity with Amazon’s warehouse workers:

                Superficially, the bottom rank of the tech industry is as different from the tech workers at the top as you can imagine. Tech workers are formally employed, with stock options, health care and theme-park “campuses” with gyms and gourmet cafeterias.

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                • Cory Doctorow@mamot.frOP
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                  8 months ago

                  The gig workers who pack, drive, deliver and support tech products aren’t even employees - they’re misclassified as contractors. They don’t get free massages - they get AI bosses that monitor their eyeballs and dock their paychecks for peeing:

                  Gig workers desperately need unions, but they also derive extraordinary benefits from self-help measures.

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                  • Cory Doctorow@mamot.frOP
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                    8 months ago

                    When an app is your boss, another app can make all the difference to your working conditions. Take #Para, an app that fights algorithmic wage discrimination by allowing gig workers to collectively and automatically refuse any job where the pay is below a certain threshold, forcing the algorithm to pay everyone more:

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