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Statement from Dario Amodei on Our Discussions with the Department of War

https://www.anthropic.com/news/statement-department-of-war
278•qwertox•58m ago•139 comments

Smartphone Mkt to Decline 13% in '26, Largest Drop Ever Due to Memory Shortage

https://www.idc.com/resource-center/press-releases/wwsmartphoneforecast4q25/
101•littlexsparkee•1h ago•97 comments

Layoffs at Block

https://twitter.com/jack/status/2027129697092731343
262•mlex•2h ago•234 comments

AirSnitch: Demystifying and breaking client isolation in Wi-Fi networks [pdf]

https://www.ndss-symposium.org/wp-content/uploads/2026-f1282-paper.pdf
305•DamnInteresting•7h ago•150 comments

What Claude Code Chooses

https://amplifying.ai/research/claude-code-picks
184•tin7in•5h ago•88 comments

Will vibe coding end like the maker movement?

https://read.technically.dev/p/vibe-coding-and-the-maker-movement
267•itunpredictable•7h ago•264 comments

What does " 2>&1 " mean?

https://stackoverflow.com/questions/818255/what-does-21-mean
58•alexmolas•3h ago•35 comments

Hydroph0bia – a fixed SecureBoot bypass for UEFI firmware based on Insyde H2O

https://coderush.me/hydroph0bia-part3/
15•transpute•1h ago•0 comments

Launch HN: Cardboard (YC W26) – Agentic video editor

https://www.usecardboard.com/
84•sxmawl•5h ago•43 comments

Understanding the Go Runtime: The Memory Allocator

https://internals-for-interns.com/posts/go-memory-allocator/
13•valyala•3d ago•1 comments

OsmAnd's Faster Offline Navigation (2025)

https://osmand.net/blog/fast-routing/
97•todsacerdoti•5h ago•25 comments

Lidar waveforms are worth 40x128x33 words

https://openaccess.thecvf.com/content/ICCV2025/html/Scheuble_Lidar_Waveforms_are_Worth_40x128x33_...
25•teleforce•3d ago•10 comments

Museum of Plugs and Sockets

https://plugsocketmuseum.nl/index.html
56•ohjeez•3d ago•19 comments

Palm OS User Interface Guidelines (2003) [pdf]

https://cs.uml.edu/~fredm/courses/91.308-spr05/files/palmdocs/uiguidelines.pdf
134•spiffytech•6h ago•61 comments

I baked a pie every day for a year and it changed my life

https://www.theguardian.com/lifeandstyle/2026/feb/22/a-new-start-after-60-i-baked-a-pie-every-day...
191•NaOH•3d ago•129 comments

Show HN: Deff – Side-by-side Git diff review in your terminal

https://github.com/flamestro/deff
68•flamestro•5h ago•44 comments

Show HN: Hacker Smacker – spot great (and terrible) HN commenters at a glance

https://hackersmacker.org
79•conesus•2d ago•71 comments

Show HN: Terminal Phone – E2EE Walkie Talkie from the Command Line

https://gitlab.com/here_forawhile/terminalphone
279•smalltorch•13h ago•71 comments

Bild AI (YC W25) Is Hiring Interns to Make Housing Affordable

https://www.workatastartup.com/jobs/80596
1•rooppal•6h ago

BuildKit: Docker's Hidden Gem That Can Build Almost Anything

https://tuananh.net/2026/02/25/buildkit-docker-hidden-gem/
134•jasonpeacock•9h ago•41 comments

Nano Banana 2: Google's latest AI image generation model

https://blog.google/innovation-and-ai/technology/ai/nano-banana-2/
454•davidbarker•7h ago•441 comments

Show HN: Linex – A daily challenge: placing pieces on a board that fights back

https://www.playlinex.com/
39•Humanista75•2d ago•19 comments

The Wolfram S Combinator Challenge

https://www.combinatorprize.org/
60•paraschopra•3d ago•20 comments

Anthropic says company 'cannot in good conscience accede' to Pentagon's demands

https://apnews.com/article/anthropic-ai-pentagon-hegseth-dario-amodei-9b28dda41bdb52b6a378fa9fc80...
13•geox•26m ago•2 comments

This time is different

https://shkspr.mobi/blog/2026/02/this-time-is-different/
100•speckx•10h ago•152 comments

Netflix Backs Out of Warner Bros. Bidding, Paramount Set to Win

https://www.hollywoodreporter.com/business/business-news/netflix-backs-out-warners-deal-paramount...
15•atombender•24m ago•2 comments

Banned in California

https://www.bannedincalifornia.org/
530•pie_flavor•1d ago•637 comments

The Physics and Economics of Moving 44 Tonnes at 56mph

https://www.mikeayles.com/blog/heavy-haulage-basics/
88•mikeayles•3d ago•82 comments

Steering interpretable language models with concept algebra

https://www.guidelabs.ai/post/steerling-steering-8b/
40•luulinh90s•23h ago•3 comments

Open Source Endowment – new funding source for open source maintainers

https://endowment.dev/
198•kvinogradov•7h ago•124 comments
Open in hackernews

Layoffs at Block

https://twitter.com/jack/status/2027129697092731343
257•mlex•2h ago
https://www.cnbc.com/2026/02/26/block-laying-off-about-4000-...

https://www.marketwatch.com/story/block-plans-to-lay-off-nea...

Comments

chilipepperhott•2h ago
What are the odds this is actually due to overhiring during the pandemic? From what I know, that was the principle reason for the Amazon layoffs. Would love to be corrected if I'm misremembering.
toomuchtodo•2h ago
People keep saying it’s pandemic over hiring, but it should be called ZIRP hiring. With the cost of money almost 4x what it used to be, companies have to deliver now, not just coast on promises of growth and success that may never materialize. Have to sing for that supper.

https://paulgraham.com/startuplessons.html

garbawarb•2h ago
I miss those days. It may have been economically silly but there was so much optimism, especially in the tech world.
AbstractH24•1h ago
Now we're just economically silly without optimism (except for one pocket of the tech world).
rvz•1h ago
That is called a bubble.

Now some here are about to experience a repeat of the years 2000 and 2008 put together.

SilverElfin•1h ago
Optimism without the ZIRP bubble is the 1990s
nxm•1h ago
Pre-paid optimism that we've been paying for now with high inflation due to overstimulated economy through printed money.
busterarm•1h ago
Except the concensus around the Amazon layoffs is that it's a shift in free cashflow to capex spent towards ram/gpus.
Bombthecat•1h ago
Could be also both...
garbawarb•2h ago
Does anyone know what teams are affected?

I wonder if this is the beginning of a new wave of layoffs across the industry like we had in 2022.

htrp•2h ago
>we're not making this decision because we're in trouble. our business is strong. gross profit continues to grow, we continue to serve more and more customers, and profitability is improving. but something has changed. we're already seeing that the intelligence tools we’re creating and using, paired with smaller and flatter teams, are enabling a new way of working which fundamentally changes what it means to build and run a company. and that's accelerating rapidly.

This is one way of making an all-in bet on AI.

>we're not going to just disappear people from slack and email and pretend they were never here. communication channels will stay open through thursday evening (pacific) so everyone can say goodbye properly, and share whatever you wish. i'll also be hosting a live video session to thank everyone at 3:35pm pacific. i know doing it this way might feel awkward. i'd rather it feel awkward and human than efficient and cold.

Well that's interesting, wonder if we'll actually get a proper accounting of which departments take which cuts.

chilipepperhott•2h ago
Their shareholder meeting is later today. Maybe we'll find out.
re-thc•1h ago
> but something has changed

i.e. we finally decided to audit head count from post covid-era.

> paired with smaller and flatter teams

i.e. management was axed

gusmally•1h ago
you don't think LLM impacts on productivity were a factor at all?
MeetingsBrowser•1h ago
If LLMs really multiply productivity, why would you fire people and handicap the boost?

I have 100 people that can now do the work of 200 people thanks to a new tool.

How is the logical response to fire half of them and bring my productivity back to where it was before?

themgt•43m ago
Demand inelasticity.
MeetingsBrowser•42m ago
> our business is strong. gross profit continues to grow, we continue to serve more and more customers
jibe•19m ago
He explains the rationale, smaller teams work faster.

we're already seeing that the intelligence tools we’re creating and using, paired with smaller and flatter teams, are enabling a new way of working which fundamentally changes what it means to build and run a company. and that's accelerating rapidly.

jpdb•9m ago
> If LLMs really multiply productivity, why would you fire people and handicap the boost?

Presumably, because some of these areas are cost centers versus profit generating.

mattbillenstein•1h ago
Even if the AI piece isn't really true - smaller flatter teams will move faster anyway. I always wonder having worked in a lot of startups with 10-50ppl, what on earth a business does with 10000.
iaaan•1h ago
Seconded. My experience has been that -- even while still complying with lots of overhead (e.g. government regulations and compliance) -- smaller teams of 1-3 devs move waaaaay faster than teams of 4-10. Could definitely speak to the overall codebase quality or some other factor, but yeah.
IshKebab•46m ago
I expect it's more that early in projects you move faster, and that normally involves fewer people.

Once projects get bigger they need more devs and also move slower.

Put a team of 1-3 devs on MS Word and see how fast they move...

Imustaskforhelp•4m ago
I found this an interesting question and did some research out of curiosity

[Full credits to wikipedia]: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Star_Division (The company behind what's gonna be essentially StarOffice/Later OpenOffice/Libreoffice given Libreoffice is a fork of OpenOffice)

Star Division was a German software company best known for developing StarOffice, a proprietary office suite. The company was founded in 1985 by 16-year-old Marco Börries in Lüneburg, and initially operated as a small startup. Its first product was StarWriter, a word processor that later evolved into the StarOffice suite.

Their number of employees by the late 1997/1990's from the wiki article suggests 170. They/StarOffice achieved over 25 million sales worldwide and held an estimated 25% share of the office suite market in Germany by the late 1990s

There aren't many true MSword alternatives for what its worth but I found a gnome project which is interesting from alternativeto https://gitlab.gnome.org/World/AbiWord/-/project_members

There seem to be 5 main members (I am not counting the Gitlab Admin and administrator)

Interestingly, If I remember correctly, I saw Alexandar Franke in here, I have actually talked to alexandar franke a long time ago on matrix back when I used to use fractal. It was definitely a fun surprise to see him in this project as well.

Aside from that, I think the problem with MS word to me feels like it tried to copy the features of previous word processors including quirks and now anything which wants to be MS word competitor is sometimes forced to copy these quirks as well which to me feels like the stressful cause for the reason why we don't see too many new approaches within this space (in my limited opinion)

jcgrillo•1h ago
They're still a megacorp, roughly, with like 6k people remaining. That's a huge company. Huge companies need hierarchy to function, the "flat" thing is a really dumb idea. There's no way to make it analogous to that <50ppl team that executes well and moves fast. To do that you actually need to have a small company.
gedy•1h ago
Sure but it'll still be a 6000+ team - I doubt nimbleness will occur now.
liuliu•56m ago
Every business metrics needs people to safeguard. That's how you get the number of ppl.
michaelt•38m ago
> I always wonder having worked in a lot of startups with 10-50ppl, what on earth a business does with 10000.

If a small business needs to send a replacement widget to a customer in a foreign country, they label it "$0 value" (as it's a free replacement part) and mail it with a swipe of a corporate credit card.

If a large business needs to do the same thing, the sender asks the mail room, giving them a budget code and delivery address; the mail room contacts the widget designer for a HTS code, size and weight; then contacts their shipping broker for a quote; then contacts the finance department to raise a purchase order; the finance department contacts the budget code owner for spend approval; then raises a purchase order; then forwards it to the sender who forwards it to the post room who forwards it to the shipping broker who arrange a collection. Later the shipping broker will send the post room an invoice against the purchase order, which they'll send on to finance, who'll query the sender who'll approve paying the invoice.

> Even if the AI piece isn't really true - smaller flatter teams will move faster anyway.

Quite possibly - but you have to remember to remove the bureaucracy, not just remove the people who operate the bureaucracy. If you try to do the large business process with the small business team, it'll be even slower.

tootie•41m ago
I question how much of this is really AI vs them just regrouping around their core products and shutting down a lot of ventures or tertiary projects. Either way, the messaging we're seeing is a real shift from the ZIRP ear. Tech companies used to use headcount as a metric of growth. They'd be hiring just to say they're hiring because it looks like growth. Now it's in vogue to boast about your AI adoption and how many fewer heads you need to operate. I think both are lot of blowing smoke, but now it's going to hurt a lot of people.
itmitica•2h ago
Why make others misfortune a platform for ego expression? Why not doing things elegant, quiet, keep it in-house? Because misery of others drives stock prices up! It's a sacrifice he's willing to make.
aforty•1h ago
Because it will go out today anyway on the investor call or later via leak so might as well get ahead of it.
lp4v4n•1h ago
>Block said Thursday it’s laying off more than 4,000 employees, or about half of its headcount. The stock skyrocketed more than 24% in extended trading.

Society provides support to this kind of decision, it's obvious why it happens.

And nobody really believes this whole "we got too efficient" so now we don't need 40% of our company anymore.

simianwords•42m ago
how do you layoff 40% quietly?
rvz•1h ago
> we're not making this decision because we're in trouble. our business is strong. gross profit continues to grow, we continue to serve more and more customers, and profitability is improving. but something has changed. we're already seeing that the intelligence tools we’re creating and using, paired with smaller and flatter teams, are enabling a new way of working which fundamentally changes what it means to build and run a company. and that's accelerating rapidly.

Once again, this is "AGI" in it's most direct and absolute version with zero fluff.

I unfortunately predicted more layoffs will occur back in 2025 [0] and I see only but acceleration on this.

[0] https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=46307549

JumpCrisscross•1h ago
> this is "AGI" in it's most direct and absolute version with zero fluff

Given it’s an ambiguous term, sure. But I don’t think a better collaborative AI is what anyone imagined when we said AGI years ago.

palmotea•1h ago
>> * this is "AGI" in it's most direct and absolute version with zero fluff*

> Given it’s an ambiguous term, sure. But I don’t think a better collaborative AI is what anyone imagined when we said AGI years ago.

He scare-quoted AGI. I think what he means is we won't experience AGI as some kind of utopia of abundance (which is how it is hyped to us), we will experience as massive and brutal layoffs.

Actual AGI will be worse. If Block had that, Dorsey wouldn't be laying off 40%, he'd probably lay off 80% or more.

wmf•1h ago
It's AGI if it works. Didn't Salesforce lay off support people to replace them with AI but then the AI didn't work?
cyanydeez•1h ago
Stock goes up in expectation of ... CEOs doing share buybacks to increase their bonus checks.
AtlasBarfed•1h ago
[flagged]
tomhow•1h ago
> ThE sToCk Is UnDeRvAlUeD

Please don't post sneering comments on HN. The guidelines make it clear we're trying for something better here. https://news.ycombinator.com/newsguidelines.html

rappatic•1h ago
i'm gonna write this terrible news in all lowercase cause it's super aesthetic. maintain a bit of professionalism for the 4,000 people whose lives i'm throwing into turmoil? i don't think so, i have my shift key taped over so i don't accidentally show respect to anybody
jcgrillo•1h ago
Imagine not being laid off in this situation.. I'd demand to be.

EDIT: I guess if it comes with 300% raise I'd pause for a bit to think about it, but otherwise absolutely not.

daxfohl•1h ago
Vibe CEOing.
operatingthetan•1h ago
Dorsey practically invented it.
raverbashing•1h ago
So, what does Block actually do?
jcgrillo•1h ago
They hire people, and then they fire them!
wmf•1h ago
CashApp
mmcclure•1h ago
Square is still a much, much bigger portion of the business than CashApp.

    Square’s ecosystem is expected to contribute $1.77 billion, while Cash App is expected to provide $58.3 million to transaction revenues.
missedthecue•1h ago
Square point of sale payment processing for businesses, Afterpay BNPL, and then the consumer side CashApp business. And Tidal Music streaming for some reason.
triceratops•1h ago
The headline numbers:

They're cutting 40% (edit: the post actually says "nearly half") of the workforce (4k out of 10k). That's huge.

The severance is 20 weeks of pay + 1 week per year of tenure, stock vesting through May, 6 months of healthcare, their corporate devices, and $5k cash.

peanuty1•1h ago
They're going from over 10k employees to just under 6k. So more than 40%.
triceratops•1h ago
Ah yeah, that's fair. The post itself says "nearly half".
peanuty1•1h ago
That significantly more generous than the 12-16 week severance packages being doled out by big tech during the great layoffs of 2022-2023 if I remember correctly.
happyopossum•1h ago
In 2023 Google gave 16 weeks plus 2 for every year of tenure, so not significantly less (and more if your tenure was >5 years), plus google also vested stock for entirety of the 16+ weeks.
citbl•1h ago
[flagged]
beachtaxidriver•1h ago
Yeah I'm with you.
mlsu•1h ago
uwu i'm a smol bean

also you're fired

JamesSwift•1h ago
Yeah, im a chronic uncapitilizer in our work slack and HN, but if I put out a 'communication' then I always shift to 'regular' grammar.
jcims•1h ago
I noticed that as well and it oddly made me sit for a minute to think about it. I ended up deciding that it landed a bit more 'real' and unfiltered. Could be interpreted many ways. Nobody knows the actual why but (possibly) Jack.
Legend2440•1h ago
There is no good way to announce layoffs.

No matter what he wrote, it was going to be insulting.

ssnistfajen•1h ago
It was a 100% intentional act. These people simply don't care and they want that be known. It's in their ego.
jcdavis•1h ago
Its an extremely annoying trend among a subset of the tech industry who think it makes them cool
jaccola•1h ago
Honestly the whole Silicon Valley shtick is becoming old. The fake positivity, the quirky writing style, the "I think the most important quality is sticktuitiveness" linkedin-esque bullshit. Not to mention the cargo-cult that is so obvious in every GPT-wrapper startup.

This was mostly born out of counter signalling the businesses that valued serious people over competent people in the 20th century.

But, like with all things, the pendulum has swung too far in the opposite direction. I believe the next wave of tech countersignalling will be people who actually do take themselves seriously, maybe even dress in suits, etc..

zzrrt•59m ago
Is there some reason your lack of apostrophe and period is supposed to be less annoying than their lack of capitalization?
chasebank•1h ago
I write most of my emails purposely misspelling words / lacking proper capitalization so the recipient knows it wasn't written with ai. ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
koyote•38m ago
I found it completely unreadable, similar to reading code without syntax highlighting.

Maybe he should have had AI fix up the grammar/spelling for him...

akshshha•1h ago
I’ll take jobs moving to India for 1000, Alex.
xtracto•1h ago
AI: Affordable Indian.
t-writescode•1h ago
Nice severance; but in this job market, holy shit.

Yeah, you get 5 months of severance and a bunch of devices and such; but, does this CEO really think these employees will find new work in that time? In this job market?

If the profits are still up and growing, why on earth would you evict 40% of the company, to send them into this job market? Why not … try new industries, play around, try to become the next Mitsubishi or Samsung or General Electric. If you’ve got the manpower and talent, why not play with it and see if anything makes money. In-house startups with stable capital, all that.

This seems … wrong.

gdilla•1h ago
because that doesn't increase shareholder value, at least in the short term, which is all anyone cares about now.
charcircuit•17m ago
Have you not noticed the massive datacenter build out consuming tons of capital right now?
Swizec•1h ago
> Nice severance; but in this job market, holy shit.

I just talked to a bunch of recruiters (we're hiring) and their main piece of advice was: The market is crazy. Move fast. We're seeing people getting jobs within days of starting to look, bailing on offers after signing because they got a better offer somewhere else, etc. 24 hours is the longest you can leave a candidate waiting. You have been warned

edit: I am in SFBA. Your reality may be different. People have spilled some 2 trillion dollars onto the area in the past 2 years. A lot of that is going to software engineers as everyone tries to shove AI down consumers' throats. Rents are up 60% in 12 months, which is not the sign of a cold employment market :)

operatingthetan•1h ago
It seems like the tech job market is exactly the opposite of this right now? Could you be more specific?
ej88•1h ago
trimodal swe compensation (elite, big tech, everyone else) extends to the job markets too
operatingthetan•1h ago
They generalized "the market." I know a lot of out of work SWEs right now.
ej88•49m ago
is there any data about the overall job market on whether it's been good or bad? genuinely curious the most recent data point shows a rebound https://www.citadelsecurities.com/news-and-insights/2026-glo...

and fwiw i dont know any swes struggling to find work personally

swe is so broad and in bubbles its hard to get an objective analysis

Swizec•46m ago
Software development jobs are up 10%. Jobs in general are down 6%

https://x.com/perborgen/status/2025890393166917857

jibe•25m ago
Job openings are down, but total jobs are up.

https://fred.stlouisfed.org/series/PAYEMS

davidw•1h ago
Is this hiring people to dig ditches for data center infrastructure or something? Because it doesn't sound like software.
Swizec•51m ago
Just the current reality in SFBA. People have spilled some 2 trillion dollars onto the area in the past 2 years. A lot of that is going to software engineers as everyone tries to shove AI down consumers' throats.
VBprogrammer•30m ago
Not being obtuse, I even googled it, but I have no idea what SFBA is in this context. I'm assuming it's not to do with windsurfing in the San Francisco Bay Area or some kind of insulation. Could you elaborate?
jahlove•26m ago
you're so close!
nick32661123•15m ago
So, onsite work in an area with no available housing?
davidw•6m ago
Probably a bunch of performative 9-9-6 BS too.
mwigdahl•1h ago
You're hiring, so of course that's the message you're getting from recruiters. "Market is hot", so take their candidates quick before someone else snaps them up. Don't believe this line without confirmation.
operatingthetan•1h ago
Yeah that would make me consider finding a different recruiter. Real estate agent mentality means their interests are not aligned properly.
thepasswordis•56m ago
No, that's just the reality of the market right now. Software engineers are an extremely hot field, likely because everybody is trying to add AI to their products.

https://www.citadelsecurities.com/news-and-insights/2026-glo...

iAMkenough•50m ago
Easier to hire consultants to add AI to do your software engineering for you than temporarily hire humans with needs and benefit costs to add AI to do your software engineering for you.
loktarogar•48m ago
I'm an software engineer with 17 years experience and I can't even get an interview at most places I put my resume in to.
davidw•44m ago
I'm being very picky with what I look at, which doesn't help, but yeah, it doesn't seem great. Maybe they're all in person gigs? Or is there some ageism? (There has always been some ageism in software)
WatchDog•34m ago
Pre-covid, and during the early covid hiring spree, I used to get messages from eager recruiters every week, I get maybe one a month these days, and they are much more tepid.
tayo42•33m ago
> I am in SFBA. Your reality may be different.

With my current job search I've got the sense that sf is once again the place to be. Everything else kind of sucks, lots went back on remote work.

garbawarb•22m ago
To anyone who's been looking for SWE jobs lately, has this been your experience?
yogorenapan•12m ago
Wildy varies. I'm a new grad and got my first offer after 8 applications and got another offer last week unprompted. Meanwhile my friend graduating from the same university has done 300 applications and a couple dozen interviews with no offer.
Grosvenor•15m ago
Can you give me your recruiters number?
pmdr•1h ago
More profits, line mustn't just go up, line must go higher. Giving away the devices is like saying "we're replacing both you and your device with AI and it's not like that device will help you get another job in this market anyway, good luck lol."
reactordev•1h ago
No, the job market is dead outside of implementing workflows for AI.
akshshha•1h ago
Most C levels adhere to the “cattle, not pets” idea too.
unreal6•1h ago
> If you’ve got the manpower and talent, why not play with it and see if anything makes money. In-house startups with stable capital, all that

We are no longer in a zero-interest rate environment, so I think those experiments are more costly than they were a few years go

jcims•1h ago
>If the profits are still up and growing, why on earth would you evict 40% of the company, to send them into this job market?

To avoid laying them off in next year's job market.

Dripping a 10% cut every year for the next four years when you *know* that you're going to do it is cowardice.

toast0•1h ago
Maybe I'm a big capitalist, but 5 months of severance seems very generous; a job hasn't been a commitment that the company will take care of you forever in several generations. Covering you until the middle of this year should go a long way, and yeah the job market is messed up, but at least it's not mid-November where holidays mean hiring falls off the rails.
Ancalagon•1h ago
Just wondering, have you been unemployed for 6+ mos before?
toast0•43m ago
Not really, no. I was underemployed for 6+ months at the start of my career, but it's easier to take whatever is available at that point. I did some data entry and then first tier ops desk restart the server when the light turns red stuff, before I got a "real job". Doing that mid career and keeping a good attitude would be difficult.

But I would think 5 months paid time before you have to go on state unemployment is significantly better than the WARN act minimum of 60 days of notice or pay or the alternative of a campaign to raise attrition. Looks like recent google/meta layoffs are 4 months, so it's 25% better than that. I always thought I wanted to get a package, but I recognize that I would probably not have been happy if it happened.

akoboldfrying•41m ago
Being let go from a job sucks.

So does being dumped from a relationship. You might not be able to find another relationship in 6+ months. But I don't think people would seriously propose that people should therefore not be able to leave a relationship.

ej88•1h ago
obviously he's going to posture his company as growing and doing well, but clearly not enough for the board and shareholders given their headcount growth from zirp

some companies are in the position to go for moonshots and block hasn't panned out

singpolyma3•1h ago
Wrong? A company doesn't owe anyone a job. Either they need the employee or they don't.
KittenInABox•53m ago
I feel like the idea that X doesn't owe you Y is fundamentally at odds with the fact that humans are a cooperative species and survive the best when they are cooperating. A choir can hold a note together because individuals can stop singing to breathe, safely covered by peers who will take their turn to breathe later. What is the point of organizing socially if not for the benefit of all society members?

I know we have to balance inefficiency and optimal allocation of resources... but I agree it doesn't seem optimal for social wellbeing to remove people from their access to health and risking their ability to house and feed themselves without a financial need to do so (like Block going bankrupt).

MattGaiser•50m ago
> with the fact that humans are a cooperative species and survive the best when they are cooperating.

I dispute that this is a fact. Maybe within a small group, but startups shouldn't be possible if masses of more cooperating people led to better outcomes. A large company should always win there and that does not happen.

> What is the point of organizing socially if not for the benefit of all society members?

We don't come anywhere close to this on a global scale. Most countries aren't this way on a national scale.

loktarogar•40m ago
Startups generally _don't_ end up with better outcomes. Large companies stay stable, startups are volatile and often end in failure.

Stability means removal of volatility, which means to stay stable they end up becoming more generalised, rather than the laser focus a small team like a startup can have. That laser focus can work out when applied to the right problem at the right time, but is very much not a guarantee.

bananamogul•47m ago
"humans are a cooperative species"

Humans are violent, self-centered tribalists. What species are you referring to? Not homo sapiens.

Imustaskforhelp•38m ago
I think we Humans can be both cooperative species and violent,self-centered tribalists species and definitely all the grey area between the two at the same time as well.
retinaros•30m ago
outside of the west yes.
KittenInABox•11m ago
I do mean homo sapiens. Humans are a cooperative species. They will hunt and gather together in loose communities naturally, sharing excess resources even if individuals are not directly contributing to the resource creation due to being too young, too old, sick or injured. Having inter-societal competition doesn't mean we don't still have cooperative society. Just because ants will fight other ants in different colonies doesn't mean ants are not a social species.
simianwords•47m ago
fundamentally you see jobs as more important than the end product. this is a tension i keep finding in many minds.
KittenInABox•9m ago
I see fundamentally human wellbeing as more important. Jobs are just the structure society has built as a gateway for this.
simianwords•5m ago
exactly, you would rather let everyone else pay higher costs for the service by indirectly paying for jobs.
geraneum•48m ago
But something something trickle down!

Or perhaps public doesn’t owe corporates bailouts when push comes to shove?

ssnistfajen•32m ago
You are trying to see employees as more than just statistics which is not what CEOs are doing. They are not empathising with 4k employees because they are not seeing 4k human beings through multiple layers of abstraction. To survive at their job they have to choose abstraction. The human brain doesn't have the capacity to simultaneously comprehend the complex needs and emotions of 4000 other human beings without burning out.

Yes this sucks, but this mode of operation for our society was repeatedly chosen through centuries of experimentation. We all asked for this, literally.

brap•26m ago
Because they’re not running a charity
pmdr•1h ago
> but something has changed. we're already seeing that the intelligence tools we’re creating and using

For some reason he deliberately avoids using the word 'artificial' here.

dfadsadsf•1h ago
Right now is exactly the time when we need to pause issuing new or transferring existing H1B/L1/other work visas for least a year until we know full impact of AI on economy and employment.
varjag•1h ago
i had two options: cut gradually over months or years as this shift plays out, or be honest about where we are and act on it now. i chose the latter. repeated rounds of cuts are destructive to morale, to focus, and to the trust that customers and shareholders place in our ability to lead.

Come on now, it's not going to be the only round.

just-the-wrk•32m ago
recently there has been a consistent drip of layoffs each day. they kind of chose all of the options
krzaG•1h ago
It is hard to tell what this company does, but it seems to be involved in bitcoin. Coincidentally we have had a huge drop in bitcoin in the last months.

I don't buy anything this weirdo says.

gusmally•1h ago
Square payment processing?
wffurr•1h ago
Block runs Square and Cash App among other payments tech.
arrowleaf•1h ago
Square payments, CashApp, Tidal (hi-fi music streaming), and some blockchain experiments
peanuty1•48m ago
They own Square, Cash App, Afterpay and Jay Z's music streaming service Tidal. They make a decent amount of money from people buying and selling Bitcoin on Cash App but most of their revenue is not related to Bitcoin.
daxfohl•1h ago
We'll see how much the AI aspect is true by whether they're thinning out teams equally, or just axing whole initiatives. My impression of Block was that it was mostly a one-trick pony (okay, two if you include CashApp) with a bunch of side initiatives that never seemed to pan out, so I'm expecting it to be more of the latter, with this being more of an admission that they're now in "maintenance mode".

Either way, I think this is how it's gonna be. Regardless of whether AI significantly increases productivity (40%? come on), layoffs will be preemptory. Executives will see the lack of productivity boost as being due to lack of pressure, and imagine engineers are just using the AI to make their own lives easier rather than to work more efficiently. You can't really double output velocity because your users will see it as too much churn, so the only choice is to lay off half the workforce and double the workload for those who stay. "Necessity is the mother of invention." They'll overlook the fact that the work AI tools provide only encompasses 10% of your job even if they're 100% efficient.

n2d4•1h ago
In what sense did CashApp not pan out? $16b revenue. Too early to say whether Afterpay will work out but looking good so far
ceejayoz•1h ago
> $16b revenue

I can make a lot of revenue selling $100 bills for $10. I'm not sure it'd "pan out".

daxfohl•1h ago
Updated to two tricks. And you could argue three if you call banking its own trick. Afterpay was an acquisition (and much smaller) so IDK if that counts.

Still, all the bitcoin stuff, music, other side ventures, most of the international expansion, attempts to appeal to bigger businesses, the recent "focus local" vision, all hardly made a dent in the respective markets and I wouldn't be surprised if they lost money or are still losing money on most of those things.

toomuchtodo•47m ago
CashApp was launched in 2013, long before Zelle and other instant payment rails arrived, which closed wallet providers solved for (Venmo too, owned by...Paypal). There is little growth to be had when these customers can get free deposit accounts with access to Zelle or FedNow to move value for free instantly. It's success to be sure to accumulate the cashflow from the customer base built, but it isn't lasting.
tempest_•45m ago
It also solves an exclusively American problem. In my country anyone can send money bank to bank, no need for a separate service.
toomuchtodo•44m ago
Absolutely, most of this is private corporate duct tape over a lack of Pix (Brazil), UPI (India), Instant SEPA (Europe), etc [1]. “Americans can always be trusted to do the right thing, once all other possibilities have been exhausted.” [2] In a US financial services market, Venmo and CashApp are unnecessary assuming you procure a deposit account from a bank or credit union with instant payment rails access [3] [4]. Even Schwab has access to Zelle, for example. You need not extend credit and have credit risk exposure for paper checks anymore as well.

[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Instant_payment

[2] (widely attributed to Winston Churchill)

[3] https://enroll.zellepay.com/

[4] https://www.frbservices.org/financial-services/fednow/organi...

vineyardmike•42m ago
> layoffs will be preemptory. Executives will see the lack of productivity boost as being due to lack of pressure,

Look I don’t like layoffs and I don’t want to come off as an apologist. I’ve been laid off from a wildly profitable company and I get that pain.

But I think at some point we do need to be honest that businesses want to give up on failed projects, and the lazy ones will do that through layoffs because tech has so much churn anyways. It’s in vogue to blame AI for these things. I doubt most of these CxOs think actually that AI will transform their business in the next few years, and I question how many even care about applying pressure to employees.

I don’t want to come off as an apologist for bad corporate behavior, because I think it’s bad, but sometimes I think they’re just taking the easy way out on corporate messaging for a not-crazy decision (of ending failed or bloated projects). As you alluded to, “maintenance mode” for a business just doesn’t need as many employees. 40% at once seems high, I’ll concede though.

mathattack•36m ago
40% actually seems reasonable for a flip into maintenance mode. That’s what PE firms do when then buy cash cow businesses. Dramatically cut engineering on new functionality, cut back on sales and marketing, remove all redundancy in operations.

Anyone who has counted on a vendor that went private or was bought by a rollup firm has felt this pain.

Better to do it all at once than repeated declines.

hellojesus•17m ago
I first entered the workforce at IBM and several months later they did layoffs (resource action). Every six months after that for my 6ish year tenure there were more resource actions.

To this day I walk into the office each morning thinking today may be the day I get laid off. My wife doesn't think it's a healthy mentality, but I'm not sure I know another path of life.

This is to say at least it's done in one fell swoop. Repeated layoffs are certainly demoralizing.

softwaredoug•1h ago
Pre pandemic Block had ~4000 employees

They grew to 11000

Now they’re going to shrink to 6000

The whiplash from ZIRP days to whatever AI cost restructuring happening today is massive

TSiege•1h ago
This makes it make way more sense. That is a huge amount of growth really fast. I've worked in those companies, it's really hard on the work culture and organization when things grow that quickly.

I think the potential for productivity is there with AI, but this size of a cut based on speculation made no sense. This is actually reasonable in this light and is probably for the best. I'll be curious to see if any employees, former or otherwise talk about it

b8•35m ago
They're back to 6,000 not 5,000.
softwaredoug•24m ago
Thank you. fixed.
baq•33m ago
> our business is strong. gross profit continues to grow, we continue to serve more and more customers

and the best part is that when others follow, ZIRP will be back.

this is going to be a proper mess.

arctic-true•6m ago
I am much more interested in how headcounts compare to 2019 than to 2025 (let alone 2022). Certainly, this is not a comfort to anyone who is losing their job. But I don’t remember anyone panicking about an unemployment crisis pre-pandemic. A lot of people are getting their lottery ticket taken away, which is less than ideal, but we’ve got a long way to go before breadlines.
skwirl•1h ago
We’re reaching “Don’t Look Up” levels of denial about the impact of AI on this site.
gusmally•1h ago
For real. Very worried about when other CEOs follow suit and there is a flood of people into unemployment.
MattGaiser•11m ago
Even if they are right about quality, people on here vastly overstate the value of quality. From socks to dishwashers to airfares, slop is a valid product as long as it is cheap. Security from a business perspective has been proven not quite optional, but it is hardly catastrophic if it fails.
LostMyLogin•10m ago
As someone that is only five years into their career at this point, I feel so helpless.
hokumguru•1h ago
I'm still not sure I quite agree with this AI replacement premise.

Assuming the premise of profitability and a sound business then this sounds like a failure of product if anything. It just doesn't follow for me that when you see more productive teams the immediate answer is that you need less people. Especially for silicon valley types this seems antithetical to scaling.

Thinking of it in two ways

- Yes you could (in theory but I still argue not 100%) cut workforce and have a smaller # of people do the work that everyone else was doing

Or

- You could keep your people, who are ostensibly more productive with AI, and get even more work done

Why would you ever choose the first?

rxyz•1h ago
Dorsey is in AI psychosis. He required every employee to send him an email weekly which then he had summarized by AI because of course he aint reading it himself.
MeetingsBrowser•52m ago
Even in "AI psychosis" I don't see how firing people is a logical response to advances in AI.

If AI tools really are a significant multiplier to productivity, companies should be hiring more people to take advantage of that multiplier.

If you suddenly have the ability to get more output per dollar spent, a healthy business should respond by spending more dollars, not spending less to keep output the same.

simianwords•32m ago
at every productivity point there's an optimal number of employees needed.

at the previous productivity it was 10,000 employees. not 10,001 nor 9,999.

at the current productivity it is 6,000.

why are you so sure that the 6,001th employee can increase profits but not the 10,001th employee before AI?

33MHz-i486•29m ago
because demand is weak and the product markets are saturated. there are dimishing returns to increasing investment. so these companies switch to managing their earnings ratio. if you cant grow revenue, then cut costs.
ej88•54m ago
i feel similarly. suppose ai makes people more productive:

1. companies that are not doing well (slow growth, losing to competition etc) or are in a monopoly and are under pressure to save in the short term are going to use the added productivity to reduce their opex

2. companies that are doing well (growth, in competitive markets) will get even more work done and can't hire enough people

my hunch is block is not doing as well as they seem to be

simianwords•35m ago
Their headcount was around 10,000. Before AI, do you think each additional employee after 10,000th would increase the profit?

- if yes, then why didn't they hire more employees?

- if no, then isn't it obvious that they don't need more than 6,000 employees who are approximately 20% more productive? if the 6,001th employee can add profit then surely 10,001th could've also added right?

duncangh•1h ago
Chopping block
testfoobar•1h ago
1. Is this a one off event due to Block's unique business environment?

2. Will other tech firms consider such large layoffs in the near future?

JumpCrisscross•1h ago
What does “entering into consultation” mean?
moregrist•52m ago
My guess: they keep you around on contract for 1-6 months because laying you off immediately would be very disruptive.

One company I worked for did this. It felt weird to everyone. But they did give a slightly better severance to those that stuck out their contracts so it worked out slightly better for them.

bananamogul•40m ago
I think "entering into consultation" means HR calls you into a small conference room.
wmf•20m ago
That's a UK legal thing: https://www.gov.uk/redundancy-your-rights/consultation
ppeetteerr•1h ago
Wishing the best for all those affected and excited to see many of you start new companies and continue to innovate.
mcast•1h ago
>repeated rounds of cuts are destructive to morale, to focus, and to the trust [...] i'd rather take a hard, clear action now [...] than manage a slow reduction of people toward the same outcome

I think this is pretty agreeable, spanning layoffs into a monthly/quarterly "Hunger Games" is very damaging to employee morale.

paxys•1h ago
Square/Block stock peaked at $273 in Feb 2021 and is currently at $54.43. So I'm not buying the whole "the company is doing great! The layoff is just because of AI."
hirako2000•43m ago
AI is the logical, counter proof reason, I feel it serves as a scapegoat so perfectly they pretend it replaces people.
MeetingsBrowser•1h ago
I don't understand anyone who says layoffs are due to improvements in AI tooling.

"Thanks to LLMs, each worker can do twice the work they could before. Naturally we are firing half the company because ... business is good and ... too much productivity is bad?"

Refreeze5224•58m ago
It's simple: it's just a lie. We are seeing the goal of AI in action here, which is reducing payroll costs.
djeekle•52m ago
Since the rush for AGI isn’t panning out, I can see tech firms engaging in tacit collusion that aims to reduce the salaries of software engineers.

There’s proof of tech firms engaging in explicit collusion back in the 00’s.

MeetingsBrowser•42m ago
I also don't understand that take.

Imagine you run a mowing service with 4 employees. Suddenly 2 more people volunteer to mow yard for your company for free!

Is your reaction to fire two of the paid employees and keep mowing the same number of yards (with reduced payroll costs), or to expand the business to mow more yards?

Which of those responses feels more in line with a "strong and growing" business that is "continuing to support more customers" and has "improving profitability"?

xeckr•20m ago
Now imagine you run a mowing service with 4 employees. Suddenly an unbounded number of people appear on the job market who are ready to work for your company at a 5% the cost of your previous employees. Best of all, they become more competent and less expensive over time. You can't yet fire your entire original roster all at once since they need to teach the new hires the specifics of the job, but after that's done, what do you need them for?
simianwords•40m ago
> Thanks to LLMs, each worker can do twice the work they could before. Naturally we are firing half the company because ... business is good and ... too much productivity is bad

this is an incorrect take. The company needs a certain amount of productivity at each point.

If not, how would you explain that they had only 10,000 employees and not 20,000? They could still remain profitable.

LLM's increased productivity and each person could do approximately 20% more work so it follows that they need fewer people. If not, they should have had 12,000 to begin with.

retinaros•28m ago
it does not work like that except in a berkeley mba mind
ivanech•59m ago
This feels similar to March 2020 when COVID was in Seattle. “It’s in the US but maybe it’s just a one-off.” We’ll see, I guess.
wcfrobert•58m ago
If AI makes Block devs 10x more productive, with 0.5x workforce, that should still be like a 5x increase in productive output right? Can't wait to usher in an age of abundance post AGI as the price of goods and services continue to drop.
m_ke•56m ago
It's going to get really ugly, Jason Lemkin called this out as a possibility a few hours ago: https://youtu.be/mBE_9vGJBUM?si=WSyZXYgV48WfrNrv&t=2908

We're about to see a lot of public SAAS companies do the same and rebrand as "AI" first

tlhunter•52m ago
Jack couldn't be bothered to use capital letters in his last layoff email either.
kypro•20m ago
I've defended the style of writing previously, but I agree. This felt a little disrespectful.

I wonder if he writes his legal letters and letters to clients/investors like this, or does he have more respect for them?

overfeed•52m ago
> i'd rather take a hard, clear action now and build from a position we believe in than manage a slow reduction of people toward the same outcome.

I hope this gets drilled into the heads of everyone who sells their labor. The company is profitable, and Jack could have kept 4000 people employed with no difference in outcome, instead, he chose this.

r-w•47m ago
How magnanimous of him to let us all know of his magnanimity!
hirako2000•45m ago
He could have been even more radical and get rid of himself, his lieutenants could ask gpt about the strategy.
signatoremo•11m ago
He did get rid of himself as Twitter’s CEO. He founded Block and Bluesky which employ thousands of people, instead of enjoying the fortune of an ex-CEO. Maybe you should be open minded a little bit?
hirako2000•46m ago
Backers probably told him to. I can't open LinkedIn any day without trending posts that engineers can hands off to LLMs. That must tilt some ideas to investors who see winners as ways to balance their losses.
simianwords•45m ago
i don't think this is true.

assuming $150,000 average salary thats around $600,000 totally so that increases the yearly profit by about 30%.

boredatoms•40m ago
While destroying morale, and increasing the difficulty of successfully recruiting later
just-the-wrk•34m ago
they are now estimating 18% instead of 17%
overfeed•27m ago
I directly quoted jack - take it up with him.
simianwords•22m ago
> The company is profitable, and Jack could have kept 4000 people employed with no difference in outcome

did he suggest no difference in outcome in terms of profits?

overfeed•15m ago
You can check for yourself, if you RTFA.

Everything I said was based off of jack's post, as I quoted it. If you take issue with the non-specificity ot think he was being less than honest - take it up with jack.

simianwords•13m ago
i don't think you understood what i'm saying nor what he's saying. you don't do a layoff without accepting a change in the outcome.
mgfist•29m ago
Block isn't a jobs program, and employees cost money. Layoffs suck (I got laid off last year) but the reality is that it's a business and regardless of profitability, if you're not worth more than your salary you're a liability. The severance given is quite generous and fair. My biggest issue is that Block should never have grown so big in the first place.
121789•6m ago
what exactly is your point? you misinterpreted what he said. he just said that all 4K were being fired, and he would rather do it in one cut than gradually. he did not say the company's outcome would be different with those 4k vs. not
kace91•51m ago
>we're not making this decision because we're in trouble. our business is strong. gross profit continues to grow, we continue to serve more and more customers, and profitability is improving.

In my country, this action would be literally illegal.

Even in countries where it isn’t, it feels highly immoral. “I’m not in any kind of pressure to do this but I’m choosing to shed the people who created my wealth for greater personal gain”.

iddan•35m ago
This is America. Like it or not.
nailer•29m ago
What government makes it illegal for management to manage their company?
kace91•12m ago
Many European countries, including mine (spain) only accept mass firings when the company proves it’s a necessity. Usually this means showing losses or the effect of force majeure events like natural disasters.

You can manage your company just fine, by not overshooting your hiring by 2x if workers were anctually unneeded for example.

acchow•4m ago
Can you point to the laws in your country that would make this illegal? I’m skeptical
crustyrusty•51m ago
"l00k at all my AI!"

Or how about your revenue lines are in retail and peer-to-peer finances, primarily for small-to-medium sized businesses and low-to-mid income individuals, primarily in the US market, all of which are struggling from tariffs and economic slowdown in their brackets.

Nah...definitely the AI.

flumpcakes•49m ago
Imagine receiving this message and the author couldn't even be bothered to capitalise letters properly. How insulting. It's like being fired by a five year old child.
wmf•23m ago
Jack Dorsey looks like a homeless person and he spends his time meditating and talking about Bitcoin. People knew what they were getting into.
justonepost2•49m ago
The year is 2030, tech companies provide the exact same value proposition to the consumer that they did in 2024, except it is buggier, full of sparkle buttons you can’t get rid of, and isn’t a source of high-paying employment. The front page of HN still has 5 posts from Blog Guys titled “Programming is Fun Again”.

The future rocks

rcakebread•47m ago
Couldn't even be bothered to type like an adult when he fired them.
IshKebab•45m ago
Yeah I was thinking the same. Pretty generous severance but I'd be pissed if I was fired by someone who can't even be bothered to press shift. Probably thinks it makes him cool and edgy.
uoflcards22•44m ago
The refusal to simply capitalize the first letter of a sentence is so obnoxious.
monomyth•38m ago
Clearly the AI is not as widely used within the company as he proclaimed :)
khazhoux•36m ago
high impact executives like myself are too busy to use up our precious time with minutia like capitalization. every second counts when youre a high impact ceo and thats just one reason why our compensation is 1000X your own.
brap•24m ago
It feels incredibly performative. Same with sama.
tortilla•12m ago
the epstein style guide says all lowercase and no punctuation is how you signal dominance from the top of the pyramid
Havoc•45m ago
Took a quick look at their financials...

I reckon this move is related to bitcoin doing poorly. A LOT of their revenue is bitcoin related and I reckon they realized they're going to have an absolute stinker of a Q1 '26 result...

slantedview•21m ago
The CEO's last visionary move was to go all in on crypto, even renaming the company. Now he's a visionary again, but firing half the company instead of himself.
sealeck•4m ago
> I reckon this move is related to bitcoin doing poorly. A LOT of their revenue is bitcoin related and I reckon they realized they're going to have an absolute stinker of a Q1 '26 result...

I had to look this up - in the last 12 months total revenue was ~24 billion of which ~8.5 billion was from the Bitcoin "ecosystem"! Truly bizzare to stake your company on this...

https://d18rn0p25nwr6d.cloudfront.net/CIK-0001512673/55ca61a...

borroka•42m ago
Anyone who has worked in the big tech industry knows that probably more than half of the workforce performs tasks that, in essence, are superfluous.

But these things happened: 1) Musk has shown that Twitter can operate with 5% (approximately?) of the workforce he inherited; 2) laying off a lot of people was seen as a sign that the company was in trouble, but not now because; 3) artificial intelligence makes point 2) not a semi-desperate move, but a forward-thinking adjustment to current and future technology development.

I've been out of work for almost a year now, after being laid off, and I think it's very unlikely that I'll ever return (not because of my choice but their choice) to work in the tech industry as a W2 employee. Oh well.

sealeck•13m ago
> Musk has shown that Twitter can operate with 5% (approximately?) of the workforce he inherited

Is X profitable? I don't think the argument was that Twitter couldn't _operate_ with 5% of the workforce (i.e. skeleton sysadmin crew), the issue was whether Twitter could make money and remain a viable business.

It seems that Twitter is no longer a viable business (i.e. less advertising spend, decline in users - especially high-value advertiser targets who now spend more time on LinkedIn, etc).

> laying off a lot of people was seen as a sign that the company was in trouble, but not now

I agree that saying you are laying people off because of AI is a lovely narrative for failing companies!

suralind•42m ago
Sucks for the people to lose their jobs, but probably the most honest message you’ll ever see.

What I don’t understand is why. There’s a natural churn at each company. Of course it’s not 40%, but probably 4-5% per year, but I doubt the company freezes hiring and they are not pressured to do this.

sealeck•22m ago
> probably the most honest message you’ll ever see

Interesting that this is your takeaway; it seems that this is effectively an investor-friendly way to admit that Block hired too many people over the course of the pandemic and doesn't necessarily have obvious expansion/growth (that would require people to write more software) on the roadmap.

"Oh the business isn't going too well so we need to lay people off" - said no CEO ever, but "AI go brrrr" makes investors happy!

retinaros•36m ago
he is worse than musk ever been. hiding behind ai
just-the-wrk•36m ago
I think the AI angle is a fig leaf for perpetual mismanagement. Managers at Block privately complained there were a lot of people doing almost no work. Recently, teams have lost people one at a time, sometimes laid off the day after each other.

If they can organize employees to make more money, they will. But they can't and admitted it.

nailer•33m ago
Quite a few people on X mentioned Block went on a top-of-market acquisition spree (Weebly, Afterpay, Tidal) and tripled headcount during Covid.
gombosg•24m ago
I still don't get it.

If AI really improves efficiency and allows the company's employees to produce more, better products faster and thus increase the competitiveness of a company... then why does said company fire (half of!) its staff instead of, well, producing more, better products faster, thus increasing its competitiveness?

Am I naive or is AI a lie when marked as a cause?

Why is it that us employees are gaslighted with the FOMO of "if you don't adopt AI to produce more, then you'll be replaced by employees who do", and why do these executives don't feel "if you fire half of your employees for whatever reason, you'll be outcompeted by companies who... simply didn't?"

sealeck•21m ago
> instead of, well, producing more, better products faster, thus increasing its competitiveness?

Probably because this is not Block's business strategy. If they could do this, then they would...

tech_jabroni•21m ago
Block was incredibly bloated. This guy is correct: https://x.com/BamaBonds/status/2027142091596288314?s=20
jscheel•17m ago
Jack Dorsey has a habit of explosively increasing headcount. Twitter was so overweight that 80% were eliminated when Musk took over. Block's headcount grew from 3,900 to 12,500 in three years during Covid. Block's stock price has also tumbled from ~$275 to ~$54 since 2022. I think that the severance package is incredibly generous, and the willingness to communicate with those affected is admirable. But I also think that Dorsey is spinning a story to cover up for ZIRP-era mismanagement. AI provides the justification, with the hope that dumping 2x the work on the survivors won't crush them because AI tools will help. The bet may pay off, I'm just skeptical of the justification.
numbers•16m ago
A few thoughts about Block as I've worked there before:

- the company thrives on long term projects that seem to fizzle out as engineers get frustrated and leave

- there are way too many MBAs and finance people now compared to the early years where building was prioritized.

- jack is only doing part time at Block, early days he was around to chat and work with varying levels of hands on

- they've overhired and over-committed to losing projects, worst of all they've de-prioritized projects that were pretty innovative because traction wasn't there quick enough for them to justify them, e.g. terminal, POS specifically for restaurants, localization for EU

- they operate on docs and in the time of AI, the workforce is inundated with slop

- also, I hate that jack can't be bothered to capitalize anything like it's cool. come on man, you're firing 4000 people, not tweeting memes

christoff12•16m ago
"we're reducing our organization by nearly half, from over 10,000 people to just under 6,000. that means over 4,000 of you are being asked to leave or entering into consultation."

holy moly

jmacd•11m ago
Block really did not come down from it's COVID/ZIRP era high # of employees as much as many other companies, and it's COVID era headcount growth was extremely rapid by any standard.

In some ways this isn't daring, future looking leadership... it's much more lazy leadership that took a while to adjust to market demands.

skeeter2020•4m ago
How messed up is the world that when a leader basically comes clean and says this is being done for efficiency reasons (and by extension the market's reward for bottom line impact) it starts to come across as "honest and brave"?