The startup says that the job losses are part of an organizational restructuring that preps it for the next phase of its business.
Spotify suddenly started making a profit in the past few months, but CEO Daniel Ek said "being lean is... a necessity."
The retail giant isn't doing so hot in the video game market.
Nextdoor joins 1,100 other Big Tech companies that carried out layoffs in 2023, affecting nearly 249,000 employees.
LinkedIn increased its revenue by 5% year-over-year in the fourth quarter of fiscal year 2023.
CEO Tim Sweeney cited decreasing revenue from Fortnite as a reason for the layoffs and said in a memo that "we’ve been spending way more money than we earn."
Employees at several Square Roots locations are out of work after an impromptu Zoom meeting informed them that the company is pausing production.
A lawsuit from the ex-head of HR claims Twitter owes $500 million for not paying all those people that Elon Musk laid off.
The billionaire says Big Tech can afford to make more layoffs, claiming it would actually increase productivity.
Mark Zuckerberg's social media company continues on its "year of efficiency" by axing about 6,000 jobs on the business side.
David Risher announced many employees are getting the boot next week, a mere five days after stepping into the role.
The editor-in-chief announced last week that writers would experiment with ChatGPT, but the company said the layoffs were unrelated.
A set of Twitter contract workers say they didn’t receive the mandated 60 days advance notice before being kicked to the curb by Elon Musk.
Apparently, not even job search platforms are immune in the latest spate of layoffs resulting from a months long tech downturn.
The document alleges that Amazon listed three times as many job openings on one Amazon Web Services team than approved for.
In January Google announced plans to layoff 12,000 employees—and many Googlers aren't happy with how those cuts are being handled.
Meta’s Mark Zuckerberg told employees he also plans to close another 5,000 open positions during this expanded ‘year of efficiency.’
Adobe, Inc. has pledged no companywide lay offs this year, as it opens its fourth office in Silicon Valley.
Amazon Web Services HR Vice President Ian Wilson reportedly voiced the idea of inviting laid off workers back to the company at a company town hall.
For the second time in four months, the Facebook and Instagram parent company could axe thousands of staff shortly before Mark Zuckerberg takes parental leave.
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