Comment by turtleyacht

Comment by turtleyacht 18 hours ago

15 replies

You can be as quickly dismissed as the guy reads off a piece of paper (for liability purposes), swivels the camera round to HR rep, and your access is cut off right after the call.

You have pretty much a minute or two (if that) to bye a sentence to a couple chats, and it's over. Done.

Oh, and swing by to return equipment. Thanks.

Not that it's worse by any previous measure. Just the process folks will go through: bloodless, swift, smooth. (They have a list to get through.)

You can always wish it never happens, convince yourself every dawn or dusk commit proves something, but only the present reality ever mattered.

Every student of computer science should experience a simulated firing. At least to consider beyond the "system under test" and reflect on business and capital, to think on the end of things along with its beginning.

closewith 17 hours ago

For context, the OP is in the EU and UK, where none of the above is true.

That said, he's a recruiter and there's nothing of value to be found in the blog post.

  • mattlondon 16 hours ago

    Well they can't fire you totally on the spot in the UK, but I believe they can put you on immediate "gardening leave" where you lose all access to systems and buildings etc. You'll still get paid and are still technically employed, but you'll not be working on anything and can't go to the office.

    I think there is some expectation for gardening leave to be available for the odd call or meeting for doing handovers etc, but realistically I don't think anyone would expect a disgruntled suddenly-made-redundant employee to really do that with any gusto or enthusiasm.

    • atomicnumber3 13 hours ago

      "you'll still get paid and are still technically employed, but you'll not be working on anything and can't go to the office."

      Oh noooooooooo, anything but that!

      Joking aside, seriously, part of why this is all so traumatizing in the US is because the second you know you're getting laid off, you're not even thinking about the job or anything anymore. You're trying to guess how much COBRA is going to be and hoping you don't get seriously ill in the next N months.

      Seriously, COBRA is often so fucking expensive that being laid off doesn't just mean loss of income, it means literally suddenly getting a NEGATIVE paycheck each month, as you now have to cover the % of the healthcare plan your employer was paying for. If I got laid off right now, i'd immediately start paying about $6000/mo for my current policy under COBRA. Then, if you do need to use it, it's still got a deducible and coinsurance!

      So yeah, that's why summary dismissal is so painful in the US.

      • Tokumei-no-hito 11 hours ago

        that has to be a typo. 6 thousand a month (72k/year) on insurance??

        • atomicnumber3 7 hours ago

          I think i multiplied a bit too aggressively in my head. I think it'd be more like 2.5k/mo. I'm out of pocket $900/mo right now, and I think that's less than half, because my employer covers 100% of my premiums and 50% of the family premiums. So double that 900, and then add me in.

    • mytailorisrich 16 hours ago

      You can actually be fired on the spot, this is called "summary dismissal", but only applies in case of gross misconduct, so the cases that become "office lore" ;)

  • objclxt 17 hours ago

    > the OP is in the EU and UK, where none of the above is true.

    You can absolutely be dismissed without cause in the UK, protections against this only kick in after two years of employment.

    • dcminter 17 hours ago

      Statutory notice period would still apply in the UK. You'll get at least a week's notice unless you've been there less than a month.

      • jessekv 16 hours ago

        True, but to be fair the statutory notice period is for the pay, not access to the internal messaging systems.

  • Propelloni 16 hours ago

    > For context, the OP is in the EU and UK, where none of the above is true.

    In the EU many protections -- depending on the member state -- only apply under certain conditions. For example, employees in companies with less than 10.25 FTE do not enjoy any termination protection beyond very short notice periods (between 1 and 7 month) in Germany.

    • mytailorisrich 16 hours ago

      > do not enjoy any termination protection beyond very short notice periods (between 1 and 7 month) in Germany.

      Not sure if that's a typo because several months of notice sounds long to me!

      • Propelloni 14 hours ago

        You get 7 months notice after 20 years of employment. I think that puts it into perspective ;)

  • Apocryphon 16 hours ago

    idk, while trite, the bulleted list is full of common sense that’s all too easily forgotten:

    > * Do not sacrifice your relationship with family and friends to appease your employer.

    * Do not sacrifice your mental wellbeing to appease your employer.

    * Do not sacrifice your dignity, values, and ethics to appease your employer.

    * Do not buy into the bullshit hype of “hustle” to appease your employer.

gedy 17 hours ago

> You have pretty much a minute or two (if that) to bye a sentence to a couple chats, and it's over. Done.

When remote in this situation, I've shut off wifi and hard powered down right after meeting before they try and remote wipe.

I enjoyed making them squirm while I take a few weeks to mail back equipment, while receiving increasingly urgent emails.

Pointless I know, but was fun.

  • mattlondon 16 hours ago

    The pros remote wipe overnight while you are sleeping, or at the very least during the meeting with HR and your VP. Waiting to terminate access until after the bad news is delivered is just asking for trouble!