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Games IT

Videogame Studio Called 'Proletariat' Declines to Recognize Union (msn.com) 59

An anonymous reader shares a report from the Washington Post: Staff at Activision Blizzard-owned video game studio Proletariat — whose name is a term for the working class — announced their intention to form a union in December of last year. "Well, what'd you expect?" the Proletariat Workers Alliance wrote on Twitter at the time. Earlier this week, however, Proletariat leadership shared an update: Instead of voluntarily recognizing the union, it will conduct an anonymous vote through the National Labor Relations Board.

Proletariat owner Activision Blizzard has been accused of employing union-busting tactics in its negotiations with two other subsidiaries that have voted to unionize, Raven Software and Blizzard Albany.

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Videogame Studio Called 'Proletariat' Declines to Recognize Union

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  • I don't get it (Score:5, Insightful)

    by timeOday ( 582209 ) on Saturday January 14, 2023 @06:44PM (#63209064)
    Deciding the matter through an anonymous vote through the national labor relations board seem like the most fair way to do this.

    Also, "Activision has been accused of..." is meaningless. Anybody can accuse anybody of anything, so what.

    • Indeed, it's incredibly inaccurate to say "staff [...] announced their intention to form a union in December of last year".

      The whole process of intending to form a union involves a vote of a majority of the employees. The union (and its leadership) derives its right to negotiate on behalf of workers by virtue of the support of that majority and management is required to accept that vote as dispositive.

      But until that happens, there's no one "announcing" anything because there is no endorsed leadership. The f

    • Exactly.

      An anonymous reader shares a report from the Washington Post: Staff at Activision Blizzard-owned video game studio Proletariat â" whose name is a term for the working class â" announced their intention to form a union in December of last year. "Well, what'd you expect?" the Proletariat Workers Alliance wrote on Twitter at the time.

      So a group of employees created a press release, that's supposed to be binding? How many/what percentage want to join a union?

      Earlier this week, however, Proletariat leadership shared an update: Instead of voluntarily recognizing the union, it will conduct an anonymous vote through the National Labor Relations Board.

      Isn't that how it's supposed to be? Do we unionize workplaces by a show of hands in the break room? Just assume everyone is onboard when the subject comes up and just unionize?

      There really is nothing her to get excited about, based on my reading of the story...

  • by Virtucon ( 127420 ) on Saturday January 14, 2023 @07:21PM (#63209128)

    A company called Proletariat doesn't recognize the workers' rights to organize and hopes the NLRB can save them? They should call themselves "Sweatshop."

    • The filthy proles know their place.
    • by Entrope ( 68843 )

      Somebody misunderstood one of [wikipedia.org] the key phrases of Marxist theory -- instead of "dictatorship of the proletariat", they thought they were supposed to establish "dictatorship of Proletariat".

      • Looking around, with parties appealing more and more to the basest instincts and the lowest common denominator, what our democracies descend into is more a dictatorship of the proles.

    • Here's a crazy idea; rename the company to Bourgeoise and make it an employee owned company.
    • A company called Proletariat doesn't recognize the workers' rights to organize and hopes the NLRB can save them? They should call themselves "Sweatshop."

      Lumpenproletariat to keep it in style https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org] opportunistically quoted:

      Generally unemployable people who make no positive contribution to an economy.

      If there aren't stickers to correct that logo by this point I don't think they're trying hard enough.

    • Out of the what, 57 employees, how many want to unionize? We're not told - we're told that an INTENTION to unionize was ANNOUNCED... so what? An NLRB-supervised anonymous vote is the way to go.

    • by Guspaz ( 556486 )

      Digging into it, while the union is claiming to represent a supermajority of the workers, the workers themselves are saying that this announcement caught them by surprise and that they haven't even signed union cards, and we know there hasn't been a unionization vote yet. In other words, there *is* no union yet, and the employer is perfectly within their rights to basically say "come back to us when you've actually formed a union that represents a majority of the workers". That's a far cry from not recogniz

  • I didn't rape that woman. Never met her before. She's not my type. But she enjoyed being raped.
    • Donald Trump or Andrew Tate, who knows these days... also not relevant to this conversation
      • To clarify my comment is not about rape. It's about the death of irony. I think it's fair to say the orange one did it. There is nothing you can say that is too shocking anymore. "She liked being raped"! Really? The King of the Morons is like my ex wife. She would say "it's good" and "it's bad" in the same breath, then look around the room to see which way the wind is blowing. Each side can now a quote what they want.
      • "Andrew Tate is going down, and this time it won't be on a 16-year old. "

        -Abraham Lincoln

  • by Arethan ( 223197 ) on Sunday January 15, 2023 @02:02AM (#63209634) Journal

    I'll go ahead and say it -- I have the karma for it, after all...

    Company with conveniently sounding anti-worker name (lets disregard it was originally established with that name with tongue-in-cheek humor) performs the usual response to an employee unionization push by engaging the NLRB to help coordinate a fair and well run vote.

    Shocking stuff going on here. Honestly. Someone call Moped Jesus, he clearly needs to detour immediately to help address this travesty.

    • by trawg ( 308495 )

      Are you saying 'proletariat' is an anti-worker name? That is the opposite of my interpretation

  • Why is the referral to an independently monitored vote news and a pile of controversy? Would you want the employer _or_ the people claiming to represent the workers conducting their own informal election and want both employer and employees to respect the result? The vote should be fair and impartial, and if either employer or aspiring union runs the vote the workers would be right to be concerned about accuracy and anonymity (for fear of reprisals).
  • I would consider joining it. For example they could negotiate to:

    • Limit foreign or 3rd party outsourcing to non-core jobs outside company primary competency
    • Give time and money for regular ongoing training, so that employee skills remain relevant to larger industry
    • Well compensated on call shifts, followed by time off for anything that required one to be ready to respond off hours, whether or not response was actually needed
    • Work from home flexibility
    • Wages and benefits, of course!

    But now, current unions can be

  • ...could characterize a "democratic secret ballot" as somehow anti-worker. LOL

We are each entitled to our own opinion, but no one is entitled to his own facts. -- Patrick Moynihan

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