Uber's Shower Gate Scandal

6 pointsposted 4 days ago
by yhosun

4 Comments

yhosun

4 days ago

Uber’s return-to-office (RTO) policies have sparked intense backlash. During a recent All Hands, execs dialed in remotely—one from what appeared to be a hotel (where a man in a towel walked by), another casually from Napa—while pushing in-office mandates for the rest of the company.

This came the same week Uber revoked remote approvals, increased RTO days, and worsened a popular benefit by moving the 5-year sabbatical to 8 years with no grandfathering. Employees were furious, the Zoom chat turned chaotic, unionization was threatened, and some were reportedly let go.

The tone-deafness and “rules for thee, not for me” behavior—especially from highly compensated leadership—has left many feeling demoralized and angry.

user

4 days ago

[deleted]

user

4 days ago

[deleted]

toomuchtodo

4 days ago

If Uber employees don’t unionize, they will remain at the whim of these executives in perpetuity. Unionizing or quitting, those are the only paths that empower.