A new recruitment campaign exclusive to the site ‘asks Redditors to go deeper than ever before to solve a problem and learn about the Navy.’
Want more bang for your buck? These 25 cities are the place to live.
Gizmodo chats with LinkedIn about a few of their premium AI tools that help assist users get work.
The outage comes after Facebook and Instagram were down just a day earlier.
There's an elegant solution to this conference room brainteaser.
Apple agreed to pay penalties and back pay over allegations it had used worse recruitment tools for U.S. citizens and residents.
LinkedIn increased its revenue by 5% year-over-year in the fourth quarter of fiscal year 2023.
An explosive report claims Bill Gates's private office asked women if they ever "danced for dollars."
LinkedIn is laying off its last sales and product teams in China and discontinuing its app as it finalizes its exit. It was the last US social network there.
There's been lots of talk about how the AI boom will lead to lost jobs, but can AI help you get a new one?
A recent survey shows that 91% of companies that are hiring want to bring on employees with ChatGPT experience.
Arthur Grand Technologies received outrage for a job listing asking for White U.S.-born citizens. Now they're taking legal action against the ex-employee.
Want a healthy balance in your checking account? Think twice before moving to these 25 expensive cities.
The document alleges that Amazon listed three times as many job openings on one Amazon Web Services team than approved for.
OpenAI GPT models are coming to LinkedIn to help streamline the process of posting jobs and filling out your profile.
Cook recommended his salary be cut after getting critical feedback from investors. His total pay for 2023 is set at $49 million, down from $84 million in 2022.
Internet grifters are angling to take advantage of jobseekers, and collect personal information.
Why is a Russian company that supplied code to thousands of apps on both Google Play and the Apple App Store pretending to be American?
Instead of earnestly complying with the simple directive, many New York job postings now feature absurdly broad salary ranges.
The new law, which was passed by the New York City Council late last year, takes effect November 1 after pushback from corporations this spring.
Mode
Follow us