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FiveFingerDiscount.com?

phillippaxton writes: "According to this link, dot-bomb victims are creating their own severance packages, no doubt walking away with the typical office tchotchkes (staplers, tape dispensers, etc.) but also big ticket items such as plush furniture, copiers, high-powered network servers, etc. One anecdote cites someone who lifted $445,549 of equipment, then tried to sell it on eBay as a company liquidating their assets." On the other hand, the fact that it's illegal to stiff your employees out of wages due them, even in a bankruptcy, isn't mentioned in the article...

418 comments

  1. Boss's car? by macdaddy · · Score: 2

    Possibly a Caddy SUV. 'nough said. :)

    1. Re:Boss's car? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There is a company (tech-bomb not dot-bomb) near me that is going out
      of business. They bought a Hummer and painted the company logo on it.

      It is now for sale along with the other assets.

      Guess you could hot-wire it ....

      .

  2. Damn. by Richard_at_work · · Score: 1

    I new i should have turned the negotiation down :/

  3. The nerve of these geeks... by Master_Ruthless · · Score: 3, Funny

    "Ex-employees thought they were entitled to it,"

    Yeah, heaven forbid that these geeks, after putting in 80 hour weeks, would feel they're entitled to anything other than an asskick out the door- far more important that some grasping VC gets .04% of his bad investment back after the fire sale...

    1. Re:The nerve of these geeks... by Lizard_King · · Score: 4, Insightful

      heaven forbid that these geeks, after putting in 80 hour weeks, would feel they're entitled to anything other than an asskick out the door

      A zealous opinion indeed. In fact, when I first read the article, I wholeheartedly agreed with you. Once I got over the emotional charge and saw the situation from a rational perspective it became very simple: These employees don't own this equipment, period. This is the only conceivable arguement. You have to remember that these geeks are getting paid for their 80 hour weeks. They are not entitled to the equipment that their employers paid for.

      --
      "My mother never saw the irony in calling me a son-of-a-bitch." - Jack Nicholson
    2. Re:The nerve of these geeks... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Funny
      Heaven forbid that geeks would actually understand that a STUPID FREAKING SOCK PUPPET would not help a company sell pet food over the Internet. Each one of these geeks deserved to have their butts kicked to the curb for the GREED in their hearts thinking that a dot-com with a dumbass business plan was going to put them on easy street. They are now demostrating it as they leave by taking what is not theirs.

      Every dot-commer that is being laid off deserves it. Just because your are brilliant, can say every line from Star Trek:TOS and have poor social skills should not prevent you from having common sense. You entered a high risk field and now you are taking your lumps. But you can't take it like a real man, no, you have to steal on your way out. I hope the cops track down each and everyone of these GREEDY LITTLE PIMPLE FACED GEEKS and throws them in jailed so they really know what it feels like to be screwed over.

      As a "geek" that stayed with a non-dot-com company during the boom, I must say I am so satisfied watching the bodies dropping like flies in the dot-com world and they are calling me up for jobs. "Yes, hey Brian, long time no talk. You need a job? Aren't you supposed to be rich by now? Oh, your stock options didn't come through. Aw, too bad. Sorry because of the greedy bastards in the dot-com world, the economy is the way it is, I don't have anything for you."

    3. Re:The nerve of these geeks... by CS_Snapple · · Score: 1

      Heh, does this remind you of the movie Office Space? They were also getting hosed by their company and just wanted a little payback. Still illegal, though.

      Time to get a job as a construction worker.

    4. Re:The nerve of these geeks... by Alien54 · · Score: 3, Interesting
      Yeah, heaven forbid that these geeks, after putting in 80 hour weeks, would feel they're entitled to anything other than an asskick out the door- far more important that some grasping VC gets .04% of his bad investment back after the fire sale...

      There was that article on F**cked Company and here on Slash about the guy who sent out the memo detailing his rage at people who were only putting in 40 hrs a week on the job. (can't find the link quickly, but I remember it)

      How many weeks can you run at 80+ hourd a week before you start to burn out? even if you have been sold on that dream of the company going big?

      Reminds me of one gal I know who was hired at a company at big bucks, and went max out for the first month or so. When she cut back to more human levels of effort, people had gotten used to her level of production, and had started to depend on it. This was not a good thing.

      So some companies can also get used to people producing at maxed out levels of production. This is not a good thing.

      So I can understand people making the justifications they do. But it was sort of a trap of the spirit, baited with greed. Once you are in the trap, it is hard to find a way out, even if you wanted to.

      --
      "It is a greater offense to steal men's labor, than their clothes"
    5. Re:The nerve of these geeks... by kin_korn_karn · · Score: 4, Interesting

      ah, but they DIDN'T get paid.

      I went through this at a dot-bomb. We got paid monthly and the last month, we didn't. Our VC (Andy Evans, the dirtiest son of a bitch alive) did some corporate paper tricks to make it so that the company didn't have any assets, so there was no recourse for us. He effectively got out of
      paying 30 people with a totally clean nose.

      So, we took the equipment, to make up for our lost wages. I feel that I'm more than justified, because

      a) this company OWNED the equipment I took [which was much less than other people took - I didn't even take my laptop] and
      b) you don't not pay me. Period.

      There are few judges that are going to throw the book at you for just keeping the gear unless you attempt to do something fraudulent with it later. And furthermore, it's just the right thing to do, all you Kohlberg-4 "I'm scared of the law" 'people' notwithstanding.

    6. Re:The nerve of these geeks... by DannyGene · · Score: 1

      These employees don't own this equipment, period. This is the only conceivable arguement. You have to remember that these geeks are getting paid for their 80 hour weeks. They are not entitled to the equipment that their employers paid for.

      No, that's the whole point: these employees didn't get paid for their 80 hour week. I myself was in this situation recently. I wasn't putting in 80 hour weeks, but I did work for a week and a half, then they called us in one morning and told us to go home. "Oh, and by the way, we won't be paying you for the last 9 days you worked." No one swiped anything, but we all wanted to. Most of the other people had families to support; I didn't, but I had just graduated from college 2 months before, and hadn't had time to save any money to live on for the next month and a half before I found a new job. If I'd had a little more guts that day, I'd have a nice little Mitsubishi 19" Diamondtron monitor that I'd been sitting in front of for the last few weeks.

      --
      *Life is too serious to be taken too seriously.*
    7. Re:The nerve of these geeks... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hardly. Smug and gloating is more like it. What's to be jealous about? I'm employed, they're not. Buwahahahahahaha!!

    8. Re:The nerve of these geeks... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Except in cases where the employees are owed their pay. Then I think this would be completely acceptable.

    9. Re:The nerve of these geeks... by Rogerborg · · Score: 4, Interesting
      • Yeah, heaven forbid that these geeks, after putting in 80 hour weeks, would feel they're entitled to anything other than an asskick out the door

      Hear hear. As long as you're sure that your employer actually owns the equipment, and that you're not going to get paid what you're owed or have been promised (written or verbal, and your immediate boss does in fact represent the company, so her bullshit promises are binding*), then I have no problem with swiping hardware.

      The way that I'd prefer to do it is to agree to take hardware at a reasonable price, below retail but way above fire sale, in lieu of wages, bonuses or benefits. But I have no illusions that the survivors in my company will have the basic shred of common sense to agree to that, as they refuse to do it right now for obsoleted hardware. It's (confidentially expressed) company policy to retire hardware through theft, as it's easier than selling it on to employees!

      This isn't an abstract issue for me. It looks like my reward for finishing my current project will be to have my office closed as being surplus to requirements. We're already training our (younger, cheaper, more gullible) replacements. Meanwhile, management exhorts us to work harder to deal with the problems of moving more and move responsibility and control to the parent office. People are putting in 80 hour weeks, and many of them are in denial that we're going to get cut. The decision will be made by accountants in a board room 3000 miles away, and it won't involve anyone we can impress with our hard work and dedication. This isn't a dot-com, it's an established tech company that's screwed up big time and has grasped further than it can reach.

      My response? Work the 40 hours a week that I'm paid for, goof and surf for 20, and keep track of where the good toys are, for when the "We regret to inform you" announcement comes. While everyone else is wailing and gnashing in betrayed anguish, I'll be slipping a Sony Viao and hard drive into the bag I keep ready under my desk, then I'll scoop up a flat panel monitor and an 802.11b access point while I wait for the 200 copies of my resume to finish printing**.

      I have no illusions that this is theft. But, you know what? I really don't give a fuck. I trusted my employer, and they've already screwed me over with impossible demands, tortuous contracts, and farcically worthless stock options. If they make the final betrayal, I'll loot the office without hesitation then sleep very soundly in my bed, believe me.

      * I live in a jurisdiction where verbal contracts are legally binding. You should try it, it's very refreshing.

      ** If you think this is the actual list, or that I'm going to store my loot anywhere findable, dream on. Find another point of idiocy to deride.

      --
      If you were blocking sigs, you wouldn't have to read this.
    10. Re:The nerve of these geeks... by ben_ · · Score: 4, Interesting

      An axiom that a friend of mine coined, that I've always liked:

      Heroic effort is not a sustainable business strategy.

      Burn out your best people and you'll crash the company.

      --
      ben_ the technologist and platform agnostic
    11. Re:The nerve of these geeks... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There are existing remedies. You are ripping off the companies creditors.

    12. Re:The nerve of these geeks... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      When my company went under, we were encouraged to walk out with as much as we could carry (excepting a few items). Of course, we worked without pay (voluntarily) for about a month, so the bossman saw this as what he could do in terms of helping us out.

    13. Re:The nerve of these geeks... by gorilla · · Score: 2

      Exactly why I'm always hounding the people who work for me to get out the door when they've done their 40 hours. If the work isn't done, then it's my responsibility to hire more people, not to overwork the ones I've got.

    14. Re:The nerve of these geeks... by pimp · · Score: 1

      While they deserve it, they are not entitled to it. That's the difference between morality and law.

    15. Re:The nerve of these geeks... by Lurkingrue · · Score: 1

      How many weeks can you run at 80+ hourd a week before you start to burn out?

      When I saw this, I just snickered a bit -- I know it is only tangentially related, but have you considered the lifestyle of medical residents/interns?

      Surgical interns, for example, are regularly expected to log 100+ hours/week. All year, every week.

    16. Re:The nerve of these geeks... by mosch · · Score: 2
      When I got laid off from a dot-bomb, I didn't take anything, but that's also because I was paid for what I expected to be paid for, and was given a few months pay for severance.

      If your employer pulls the ever famous 'WHOOPS, you just worked for free' bit, and skips out on the check, I really don't see what is morally wrong with taking assets equal to the value of what's owed you. After all, what you're doing is saving the company the overhead of having to deal with an asset management Company to find the money with which to pay you.

    17. Re:The nerve of these geeks... by denshi · · Score: 2
      We need more people like you.

      Wait, check that. We need to work *for* you.

      Hiring in the Bay Area?

    18. Re:The nerve of these geeks... by cholokoy · · Score: 1

      They thought they were promised the moon (stocks and options, etc.) when they were hired and when this did not happen they theought they were entitled to something and the easiest were these properties that can be easily moved out of office premises.

      --
      Return the bells of Balangiga.
    19. Re:The nerve of these geeks... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Damn that's a funny comment! You do make some good points Like the CE0 making decisions 3000 miles away. I laughed out loud @ your Company Policy to retire equipment via theft. Ha ha ha Hilarious! Interesting Perspective.

      My Favorite Line:
      &gt ....I'll scoop up a flat panel monitor and an 802.11b access point while I wait for the 200 copies of my resume to finish printing

      Priceless comment! I couldn't help but chuckle becuase , I actually did print out a shitload of resumes from my Ex-Employer's Copy Machine! I'm Assuming the rest of your comment is either BS or you've got huge testicles. Mine are obviously too small to give my real name
      .... And I didn't even take the stapler ;-)

      ~~Anonomous Coward~~

    20. Re:The nerve of these geeks... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Don't worry, those white-coated fuckers make up for it later by giving us all mad cow disease and AIDS and then charging us our life savings to extend our lifespan by two weeks.

    21. Re:The nerve of these geeks... by gmarceau · · Score: 1
      I have no illusions that this is theft. But, you know what? I really don't give a fuck. I trusted my employer, and they've already screwed me over with impossible demands, tortuous contracts, and farcically worthless stock options. If they make the final betrayal, I'll loot the office without hesitation then sleep very soundly in my bed, believe me

      I'm with you. This might be thief, but it is also justifyable civil disobedience.

      Did you say binding verbal contract? How do they enforce them? That is my big question. Do you have first or maybe second hand account of procedures? I'm very curious. Do you mind saying where is that?

      --
      This post was compiled with `% gec -O`. email me if you need the sources
    22. Re:The nerve of these geeks... by scowling · · Score: 2, Informative

      I've heard stories about Evans that'd probably even make *your* skin crawl. Last year, Envision was trying to buy PureEdge, a reasonably successful XML-based software company here in my hometown. They were doing this only three months before Envision went belly-up...and while Envision was being sued for steling trade secrets on the pretext of due diligence while looking to buy a company.

      Yet, they'd convinced the owners and staff for considrable time that they were a great company with a future. When I tried pointing out Envision's problems and Evans' background to friends of mine at PureEdge, I was viewed as someone with an axe to grind against *both* companies (when all I wanted to do was to sound the klaxons -- last thing I want is to see my friends out of work).

      The guy has both fraud and securities fraud convictions on his record. He's bad news. I don't blame you, even a little bit, for taking what you could.

      --
      www.kitchengeek.com -- Nosh for
    23. Re:The nerve of these geeks... by Rogerborg · · Score: 2
      • Did you say binding verbal contract? Do you mind saying where is that

      Scotland. It's an uncommon legal quirk, and you'd better have witnesses and such, but it has some interesting effects.

      For example, it's common in England for a house seller to agree verbally to a sale, then actually sell the house to a higher bidder (known as "gazumping" for no readily apparent reason). That doesn't happen nearly as much in Scotland. You can still get screwed, but it's less likely, and you do have the law on the side if it comes to a dispute.

      By the way, I know that two wrongs don't make a right. But I'm not going to pretend that I'm above the "you started it" school of morality.

      --
      If you were blocking sigs, you wouldn't have to read this.
    24. Re:The nerve of these geeks... by jmauro · · Score: 1

      That company would be Cerner. Not a place I'd like to work in a million years. They have a policy not to call their employee's employees, but associates. Like that really means they have any say in the company.

    25. Re:The nerve of these geeks... by Rogerborg · · Score: 2
      • I'm Assuming the rest of your comment is either BS or you've got huge testicles

      It might very well be BS, but I've done the inventory, and I have the means and the motive.

      My point (easy to miss) is that I really don't want to have to find out if it's bullshit or not. I'll toil honestly for as long as I keep getting paid, and I hope that "We regret" memo never arrives.

      But if it does (and it already has for two other buildings and half of one floor of mine), then I don't want to be one of the people crying or yelling in genuine anguish. The only thing that will make me feel better at that point will be to fill a bag with toys and chant the calming mantra "Fuckyou,fuckyou,fuckyou."

      But I really, really hope that I never have to find out if I can actually do it.

      --
      If you were blocking sigs, you wouldn't have to read this.
    26. Re:The nerve of these geeks... by Faceprint · · Score: 1

      I work for my company during the summer (and this year during fall semester too). I usually put in enough hours that i'm about 2/3 as productive as a full-time employee would be in a year.

      80 hour weeks, and the pressure of being the lead on this project WILL burn you out. I've started taking off most weekends to go down to school and hang out with my friends, because I'm pretty sure I'll lose it otherwise.

      Know what the weird part is? I somehow feel BAD when I don't work a weekend. Like i'm not putting in my fair share. I don't think my boss or my co-workers see it that way, but that's the mentality i've gotten in to.

      And some day we'll get VC, and then i'll REALLY have to work ;-)

    27. Re:The nerve of these geeks... by gorilla · · Score: 2

      Fraid not. I'm in Canada.

    28. Re:The nerve of these geeks... by Mr.+Bad+Example · · Score: 1
      There was that article on F**cked Company and here on Slash about the guy who sent out the memo detailing his rage at people who were only putting in 40 hrs a week on the job.

      I think you're talking about this.

    29. Re:The nerve of these geeks... by mightbeadog · · Score: 1

      So, your plan is to stay with an employer who you know is going to cheat you, just to increase your I'm-a-victim sense of entitlement, which you plan to cash in for a minor revenge only their creditors will actually feel, and gear that's worth a fraction of what you'll be owed.

      Yes, the job market sucks. (I know, I was layed off last week.) So start applying and interviewing now, instead of wasting time with these BS games.

    30. Re:The nerve of these geeks... by DarkEdgeX · · Score: 2

      I'd agree with your position, except for the fact that in most states geeks are "professionals", and exempt from being paid overtime (this is especially the case where I live and work, Washington State). My first dot-com employer took full advantage of this fact, never paying me a dime extra for all the Saturday's I worked, but the first time I was sick or missed a weekday, he docked my paycheck for an amount equal to my salary / 52 (weeks in year) / 5 (days in week).

      So sure, they get PAID, but are they paid fairly and accurately given the hours they work, no.

      --
      All I know about Bush is I had a good job when Clinton was president.
    31. Re:The nerve of these geeks... by jetgirl25 · · Score: 1

      Where in Canada? If it's Vancouver, I may be interested. :-)

    32. Re:The nerve of these geeks... by jetgirl25 · · Score: 1

      But really, how many of these laid-off employees are stealing to make up for unfulfilled "promises" (stock options etc.) as opposed to UNPAID salary? All the morally superior posters screaming about "greedy" dot-com employees don't seem to be getting it. Most of these people are taking equipment in lieu of those 2-3 paycheques (let alone severance pay) that they will NEVER be paid. Why get all righteous over minor employee theft but not over the company stealing from the employees? And since when do the faceless creditor companies get more sympathy than the betrayed (remember they haven't been PAID) employees?



      Just my two cents in response to this entire thread... don't assume my ire is directed at you cholokoy. :-)

    33. Re:The nerve of these geeks... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      I work at PureEdge. When the merger was being pushed we met with the CEO of Envision, and he was pretty slimey too. The whole pitch sounded a little too skewed toward Envision, a company which didn't do anything except buy other companies. All the questions we asked about what would happen to us, the workers of PureEdge were answered with business jargon regarding us, the corporation of Envision. We (the regular employees) were all hoping it would fall through, and we were happy when it did. It was also fun to watch Envision's stock price slide.


      For those who don't know, Evans bought an e-tailer called Perfumania which sold perfume over the web. He then used that company, which was public, to buy Envision Development, more or less for the name. He then renamed Perfumania and changed the stock symbol. Through a variety of shell investments he pumped up the stock price and used that stock to buy other tech companies (a lot of which he was already involved in), creating something halfway between an incubator and a conglomorate. Luckily he came after PureEdge fairly late, and we didn't sign anything prior to the whole house of cards collapsing. I'm not sure what happenned to the other companies Envision bought, but I'd be surprised if any of them survived.

    34. Re:The nerve of these geeks... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hmm, I would like to bet that I know
      the company you are working at.
      Downtown, Helsinki, Finland.
      Though many would call your
      company a dotcom.

      Great plan, I respect your strategy.
      How about working 20 h + surfing another
      20 to get the mandatory 40 in a week?

      Say hello to spaniards.

    35. Re:The nerve of these geeks... by OmegaDan · · Score: 2

      Californias even worse ... I work for the University of California Riverside ... For some fucking reason my job as sysadmin falls under the rules and regs for "clerical" help ... One day we worked 17 hours to get a proposal out the door (which has *shit* to do with my job anyways) ... I went to see payroll the next day to ask if I was elidgeable for time and a half or something ... The payroll lady looked up the rules and all I was elidgeable for was COMP TIME! on a 17 hour day! She showed me how to fudge the time slip so I'd atleast get my regular hourly wages ...

    36. Re:The nerve of these geeks... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In some rare cases no doubt, but it's standard business practice in this industry for managers to screw a project and then threaten the people who actually do the work if they should dare to refuse to do overtime without extra pay. Then when the companies die these same managers take the money and run leaving the working people to burn.

      These employees are as entitled as anybody to severance pay - these rights should be enshrined in strict laws; laws should give preferance to the worker over the corporation. At worst they are also creditors and should get their percentage, at best they should get the money first and the rich can take the hit. It's only corporate propaganda that says they aren't entitled to something.

    37. Re:The nerve of these geeks... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think he said he was from Scotland, which is about 7 hours ahead of New York (give or take)
      In that case, I think he's posting from Home

    38. Re:The nerve of these geeks... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Cripes... 80 hour weeks - that's about twelve hours a day (inc. travel). My 45hour week takes a strain on me - I can't imagine that.

    39. Re:The nerve of these geeks... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      >Fraid not. I'm in Canada.


      Yet another reason why Canada rules. As if we needed any more. . . ^_~

    40. Re:The nerve of these geeks... by logicnazi · · Score: 2

      As someone pointed out before some of these employees were owed wages by the company...and I believe employee wages are the first thing that gets paid out of the comany..in any case they should be. Therefore legally the enlyoees may own taht much worth of the comapany property.

      You may see they should sue in court for it ,after all it would be illegal to break into someones house to get even for a debt they owed me, but the situation is symetric here, it should be just as much theft for the owners or VCs of the comapany to take the items.

      Now it may be that the VCs or Owners get legal judgements in their favor but this may reflect only their prepardness for this sort of action and greater legal acumen rather that the justness of their case (indeed the case is much harder for the employees b/c they need to show the financial manipulations of the owners/VCs which make the comapny look utterly bankrupt are in fact nefarious). In this case they may even be legally entitled to that much money but the imperfect nature of the legal system screwed them over. It is hard to believe in this case they are doing wrong.

      Then again those earlier posters could have been BS and you may have just been trolling.

      --

      If you liked this thought maybe you would find my blog nice too:

  4. Insurance companies by adaking · · Score: 2, Insightful

    It sounds like the insurance companies are as bad as the people stealing the stuff to begin with. It's not theft if your employees steal from you?

    If anyone knows where I can get an Aeron cheap though, let me know... ;)

    1. Re:Insurance companies by haruharaharu · · Score: 1

      If you allow claims for employee theft, fraud gets really easy

      --
      Reboot macht Frei.
    2. Re:Insurance companies by adaking · · Score: 1

      But what's to keep a company's owner from seeing all this missing stuff, breaking a window, and then calling the insurance company? That's just as easy as "stealing" the stuff yourself, it's just that the insurance company has to pay for the window too.

  5. FiveFinger Discount.com by beebware · · Score: 1

    For a moment, I thought it was the 'other' five finger style of things...

  6. Caught in the act by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Funny

    When a startup that my company was financing went under, my department laid claim to the computers. So two guys from here went over there and began loading up the truck. During their last run they put the remaining monitors on those nice chairs (what are they called? aeron?) and wheeled the whole thing out to the truck. When they walked back in to say "All set, we're taking off" the beancounter in charge of the operation said "You're gonna bring back those chairs, right?" D'oh.

    1. Re:Caught in the act by Yahiko · · Score: 1

      My response would be "yea, sure i'll bring them back."

      What're they gonne do? Fire me? :)

      --Yahiko

      --


      Everything I say is a lie.
      Except that. And that. And that. And that.
  7. Sign of the times. by Lumpy · · Score: 3, Insightful

    First off while it's wrong to stiff your employees, stealing equipment is just plain thievery. The people that do this are just untrustworthy thieves and the company should have done a better background check to begin with. I can see someone swiping a pen or a blank CD that they burned at work or even postage on the postage machine. These little things are expected by management in the day to day operation. But walking off with a load balancer or ML530 server, or color laser printer? Unbelieveable.

    --
    Do not look at laser with remaining good eye.
    1. Re:Sign of the times. by oogoody · · Score: 1

      Stiffing your employees is thievery of kind
      far worse than stealing equipment. Your values
      are highly suspect if you value equipment that
      will get liquidated later over the lives of
      real people.
      Unbelieveable.

    2. Re:Sign of the times. by unformed · · Score: 2

      Yes, it's illegal. But when you're a parent on a fixed budget trying to take care of your kids, and your company decides not to pay you for your last two weeks of work, what do you do? Do you sit there and take it up the ass? Or do you figure out a way to make money?

      I'm sorry, but if a company fucked me over by not giving me my paycheck, and not offering an explanation, things are either going to start disappearing from the office, or servers and networks are going to begin to go down, consistently.

      First you turn the other cheek, if they continue, then it's an eye for an eye; that's just how the world turns.

    3. Re:Sign of the times. by Erasmus+Darwin · · Score: 2
      "I'm sorry, but if a company fucked me over by not giving me my paycheck, and not offering an explanation, things are either going to start disappearing from the office,"

      However, if the company's going under anyway, then all you're really doing is stealing for the company's other creditors (including the other employees), rather than from the company itself. Also, I suggest you RTFA with regard to the leasing company issue -- in many cases, you're just stealing from the company that leased the item to your company.

    4. Re:Sign of the times. by NetJunkie · · Score: 2

      Spoken like someone that has never been screwed out of a month's pay....or more.

    5. Re:Sign of the times. by aozilla · · Score: 3

      The people that do this are just untrustworthy thieves and the company should have done a better background check to begin with.

      Likewise, the employees should have done a background check on the company before doing work without getting paid first. By working in that manner, you're granting the company credit, so you better check its credit rating.

      --
      ok then your [sic] infringing on my copyright! Could you as [sic] me next time before STEALING my comments for your own?
    6. Re:Sign of the times. by Steeltoe · · Score: 1

      Unfortunately, two bads don't make it right. I have huge understanding for people doing something like that, but it's still a wrong action. When everything we do is a reaction, no wonder the world sucks. We make it so. Blaming someone or something else doesn't solve anything, and sometimes shit just happens. Usually, we have a big part in it.

      - Steeltoe

    7. Re:Sign of the times. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think that's unbelieveable, think about what the employee's lost, they worked these 80 hour weeks, thinking they were going to get compensated in the end. Now who's the real theif? As far as background check, uh go read the article again, because it says many of them have no criminal records and would not do this under normal circumstances. I'd like to see you live on un-employment.

    8. Re:Sign of the times. by Darby · · Score: 1

      Unfortunately, two bads don't make it right.

      I disagree. If a company owes me money for work I've already done and they've already been paid for and they refuse to pay me, then by taking assets equal to the amount I am owed Everything is made right.
      No one owes anyone anything at this point. Now the law doesn't see it this way, but it is still right.
      It is different if you have been paid what you are owed and then laid off.
      If you owe the IRS money, they will take it out of your paycheck. Same exact thing here. The only difference is you don't have the power of the IRS on your side, so your actions would be classified as illegal.

    9. Re:Sign of the times. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      soo let's see... my job, I feel, is not paying me enough. So I should start stealing to bring my income back up to what I think it should be?

      Sorry, you're a thief. Plain and simple scumbag thief.

      This is a perfect example of what is wrong today and what happened to the world. This "I'm entitled" mantra is a great excuse to be anti-social... Hey! Let's go beat some ethnic peopel up! They stole good programming jobs from us! Or better yet, Let's burn down my boss's house! He pissed me off yesterday.

      Nice example everyone... Tech-geek = Petty thief
      Therefore dont hire them.

    10. Re:Sign of the times. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How about $450,000 + 1.2Mil in loans.

      I sold my boat and 95% of my assets to keep the company afloat and to pay employee saleries. What do I get? a boatload of thieves. Ungrateful scumbag thieves that robbed my blind.

      My only happines is that 3 of them will never get a job with a security clearance again, and one now has a criminal record... and the entire lot will get blackballed by me forever. If anyone asks about them I will be sure to warn the new employer.

    11. Re:Sign of the times. by Darby · · Score: 1

      soo let's see... my job, I feel, is not paying me enough. So I should start stealing to bring my income back up to what I think it should be?

      Nice strawman, troll.
      Not "what you think it should be", but what they agreed in writing to give you.
      See the difference?

      This "I'm entitled" mantra is a great excuse to be anti-social...

      I am entitled to be paid at the agreed rate for work I already did.
      Here's a good idea. Why don't you come and clean my house for free? Gee, why not? Your argument is that you should although you owe me nothing.

      You are an idiot, Thanks for playing.

    12. Re:Sign of the times. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You are correct that these guys are assholes for not giving these employees their due pay, but the original poster was correct when he said two wrongs do not make a right. It seems to me that the law would correct this for you and you would not have to resort to stealing from your employer. If the legal system in the US can not resolve this, then that system is broken and needs to be fixed.

      This is obviously just an act of revenge which is not ethical by any means. If it is not ethical.. then you should not do this.

    13. Re:Sign of the times. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Very difficult to do, especially if it's a startup company. The problem is that companies who do this are usually very nice to you in the beginning. After a period of time, a jeckel and hyde scenario happens and you're no longer working for the same place you applied at.

    14. Re:Sign of the times. by Arkaengel · · Score: 1

      The way I see it, a company that's employing people with no intention of paying them is basically stealing those employees' time and labor. I don't think stealing from thieves is a morally reprehensible act, especially given the fact that most employees these days are disadvantaged when it comes to taking their former employer to court.

    15. Re:Sign of the times. by aozilla · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Very difficult to do, especially if it's a startup company.

      If it's a startup company you're taking a big risk by working there. If you want stability, work for Microsoft, and even then, put a few months pay into a low risk savings account. On the other hand, if you can afford to take the risk, many of these startup companies are the most fun and highest paying jobs to work for.

      If the risk is really a problem for you, find out about the main investors and executives. When I started working for my first internet company, a simple search on Yahoo showed lots of information about the previous investments that our lead investor made, and I even found out some information about the former companies of our CEO. If I had particularly cared (I didn't mind risk, so I didn't), I could have contacted those previous companies and asked for even more information.

      Above all, remember that if it looks too good to be true, it probably is. Maybe you really have won the lottery by getting that company to choose you over all the other candidates, or maybe that company has just found the biggest sucker. Ultimately you always have to take some risk, but there are ways you can minimize it.

      --
      ok then your [sic] infringing on my copyright! Could you as [sic] me next time before STEALING my comments for your own?
    16. Re:Sign of the times. by Darby · · Score: 1

      It seems to me that the law would correct this for you

      Perhaps it would, but not quick enough for my creditors. If I am going to get my car repossesed, evicted from my apartment and my credit rating thrashed because of someone else's fuck ups, then I am obligated to protect myself.

      This is obviously just an act of revenge which is not ethical by any means. If it is not ethical.. then you should not do this.

      It is *not* revenge in the case where the money is yours to begin with. Ethically it is perfectly right. Legally it is shady. Two very different things.

    17. Re:Sign of the times. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Tough luck budy, your fault for taking a job with idiots driving the boat.

      Sorry, but I have no pity for these tech-idiots. They took the job based on greed ($300,000K for webmaster? Cool! that's what I'm worth! NOT!) they perpeuated the greed... (Gimmie a $3K chair! I cant produce without it, and free cappuchino,and free pop, oh and I want to work looking like a slob or freak)

      then they get slam-dunked by people that are 100% like them. Thieves and idiots.

      You deserved it buddy, and dont whine at me in the unemployment line about how you cant afford tires on your BMW.

    18. Re:Sign of the times. by Darby · · Score: 1

      Whatever, Fuckwad.
      None of your spoutings apply to me.
      Simply put, if you owe me then I *will* collect.

  8. Getting wages owed you by Evro · · Score: 4, Interesting

    the fact that it's illegal to stiff your employees out of wages due them, even in a bankruptcy, isn't mentioned in the article...

    I have been a victim of this, and am owed approximately $7500 by my former employer, who one day decided not to pay anyone (not lay us off, just not pay us; then offered no explanation for two weeks). Does anybody know what recourse there is for people like me to get the money owed them? And what to do if the corporation for which you worked is dissolved? Can you go after the assets of the CEO and/or other executives? How? Through the Department of Labor (this is New York state) or through a private attorney? What has worked for people in the past?

    --
    rooooar
    1. Re:Getting wages owed you by graybeard · · Score: 1

      You can move to the front of the line for $4000 of your wages, so you'll have a better chance of getting at least something. For the balance, you are thrown in with the other chumps who loaned your employer money. Read about it here.

    2. Re:Getting wages owed you by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I went through this for a similiar amount.

      Department of labor will do a great job if they can. They are tough. Carefully review your employment agreement. Mine had a clause stating all disputes would be resolved by binding arbitration. This means that Dept of Labor does not have jurisdiction.

      Company I worked for did an employee review on me two months after I quit, saying my work was not up to par. Since the losing party pays for arbitration, I decided not to chance it.

    3. Re:Getting wages owed you by tmark · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Does anybody know what recourse there is for people like me to get the money owed them?

      You go after them in bankruptcy court. Michael's intimation that somehow the employees' theivery is justified in these situations is just so stupid it makes me sick.

      As for whether or not you can go after the assets of the CEOs, I believe you cannot. IANAL, but as I understood it companies are structured to protect the shareholders and executives from the creditors of the company. Now, if some of them were personally negligent, this might be different, but problems arising from their actions as executives of the company are probably not actionable.

    4. Re:Getting wages owed you by sandidge · · Score: 2
      Michael's intimation that somehow the employees' theivery is justified in these situations is just so stupid it makes me sick.

      Yet, the fact that the companies had the employees work basically for free without, you know, saying "Hey, it's highly unlikely that you'll ever see the pay for that" doesn't make you sick at all?

    5. Re:Getting wages owed you by ekephart · · Score: 0

      I can't speak for New York but here in Texas the Texas Workforce Commission oversees employee claims. I had to file a smaller claim (few hundred dollars) once against an employer that refused to pay me part of my last check, it was even a friendly departure, proper notice and all. I must say I was surprised; not only were the people with the TWC informative but they were friendly and prompt. I imagine the Department of Labor or the Office of NY Attorney General would be happy to inform you if you call them.

      --
      sig
    6. Re:Getting wages owed you by philburt · · Score: 2, Informative

      tmark said:
      ------------
      as I understood it companies are structured to protect the shareholders and executives from the creditors of the company
      ------------
      This is not true. The personal assets of the executives are protected unless they were used as collateral to secure loans. Shareholders get no protection - their entire investment is at risk. Creditors get paid first, then owners. Often a bank will put in executive compensation restrictions when making a small business loan specifically to prevent an owner from bleeding a company dry. If the company goes into bankrupcy court and you are an employee that gets paid AFTER working (you are in the "wages payable" ballance sheet item), you should be entitled to the same "pennies on the dollar" that the other creditors get.

    7. Re:Getting wages owed you by tmark · · Score: 3
      Yet, the fact that the companies had the employees work basically for free without, you know, saying "Hey, it's highly unlikely that you'll ever see the pay for that" doesn't make you sick at all?


      It doesn't make me sick. I sympathize with the employees, and they should do all they can *within the law* to seek remedy, but this is the way business works. *Individuals* declare bankruptcy all the time, leaving their creditors out to dry; does that make you sick ? Would you argue it was OK for the creditors to sneak into their house and steal the individual's belongings ?

      When I worked for a dot-com-wannabe years ago, I had a problem with a pay check that kept bouncing. For a few days management was explaining this as being due to various sundry problems that were all, of course, the bank's fault. Finally I walked into the CEO's office and told him that I needed my money and that if I didn't receive it there would be a problem. We both understood this to mean I would not work anymore until I was paid what I was owed. I received a personal check the next day. My point is, I can't feel *too much* sympathy for employees who let their company get too far in arrears.


      And as for your own justification of the theivery, I have a hard time imagining that any of these employees were *quite* stupid enough to be owed so much money that they could 'justify' stealing some of the larger-ticket items described in the article.

    8. Re:Getting wages owed you by tmark · · Score: 2

      as I understood it companies are structured to protect the shareholders and executives from the creditors of the company

      Sorry, what I meant was that the shareholders and executives were protected from legal action by the creditors, such as I imagined the original poster to be seeking. i.e., the executives and shareholders are not *personally* liable for any debt undertaken by the company and could not be sued.

    9. Re:Getting wages owed you by sandidge · · Score: 2
      My point is, I can't feel *too much* sympathy for employees who let their company get too far in arrears.

      In the majority of cases I've heard of, the employees who are getting the kick in the ass of no pay aren't the ones making the half-assed command decisions that put the company in the toliet in the first place.

      And as for your own justification of the theivery

      Uh... where in my previous post did I justify the theivery as the "right" thing to do? I don't think that it's morally or legally the right thing to do, but to paraphrase Chris Rock "I'm not saying they should of stole that stuff.... but I understand!"

    10. Re:Getting wages owed you by Evro · · Score: 1

      I don't think I even had an employment agreement. Employer even refused to sign a contract he had me draw up. They emailed me what they claimed was a confidentiality agreement which I never even opened, much less signed. The only paperwork I filled out was the usual tax stuff that all employers have to give you. So I don't know where that puts me.

      --
      rooooar
    11. Re:Getting wages owed you by Rogerborg · · Score: 3, Interesting
      • You go after them in bankruptcy court. Michael's intimation that somehow the employees' theivery is justified in these situations is just so stupid it makes me sick

      Strong words. How about offering to take assets at near-cost prices in lieu of wages instead? Formalise the arrangement.

      That said, if they work anything like my employer, they'll be too dumb to take the offer. I've actually been told that the fact of obsolete laptops being taken out of service through theft is tacit company policy. It's easier than Facilities and Information Services fighting it out to avoid administrating an employee purchase scheme.

      I personally have been stopped and searched by security as I carried an obsoleted desktop to my car. It took me and my friendly local IS boss half an hour to convince them that it was going to be thrown in a dumpster if I didn't take it (along with the half dozen identical boxen already in there), and they actually made me write and sign a statement to this effect.

      This is the kind of mentality that we're dealing with here. Assets left gathering dust or fire saled for peanets because nobody wants to be responsible for doing something sensible with them.

      --
      If you were blocking sigs, you wouldn't have to read this.
    12. Re:Getting wages owed you by DannyGene · · Score: 1

      We both understood this to mean I would not work anymore until I was paid what I was owed. I received a personal check the next day. My point is, I can't feel *too much* sympathy for employees who let their company get too far in arrears.

      The majority of these cases aren't employees who aren't getting paid at a company the work for; they're not getting paid because the company went out of business. In other words, you can't use that leverage of "I'm not going to work anymore until I get paid", because you're not going to be working anyway!

      --
      *Life is too serious to be taken too seriously.*
    13. Re:Getting wages owed you by YU+Nicks+NE+Way · · Score: 2

      If your employer went into bankruptcy, then all their debts, including the one that they owed you, were cancelled. You can get into line with the company's other unsecured creditors, but, to be honest, your odds of getting much in compensation are low.

      As to going after the CEO's assets, there are essentially no cases in which you'd have any legal standing to do so, since the corporate veil was created precisely to prevent that. If you held stock in the corporation, then you might have a case against the management of the company if you could show that they mismanaged the company into the ground. Again, however, your odds of winning are very poor, and, frankly, probably not worth the expense.

      The thing to understand is this: when employees are canned without severance, it sucks. It's sleazy, and disreputable, and the people who do it are the scum of the earth. However, beyond that, Michael's wrong -- what your employer did isn't illegal; we as a nation protect those whose businesses fail, even if they should never have hired employees in the first place.

      That protection isn't one-sided, though. You weren't fired for cause, so you can collect unemployment insurance. You may well be eligible for other transitional programs, too -- exploit them. We all pay taxes to protect people like you, so don't waste the money we payed.

    14. Re:Getting wages owed you by Evro · · Score: 3, Insightful

      How about piercing the corporate veil by proving intent to defraud? I was told the Company had plenty of money 2 or 3 days before the payroll failed to go through, and when I asked what was going on, I was told only "I don't know" by everybody. For two weeks nobody would tell me what was going on. Then it turned out that the company had only $14,000 to be split among ~20 people. THEN they expected everybody to continue working for free. But they promised us shares of the company in exchange for our forbearance. I had to stifle a laugh at that point. In any case, it seems to me they were trying to get more work out of me while knowing they couldn't pay me, which sounds like intent to defraud, which hopefully I can use somehow in court, which it seems is my only recourse.

      As for your saying that Michael's statement that the stealing is justified is stupid and that all these disputes should be resolved in court, I can only say that right now I owe $2000 on my credit cards, ~$2000 to other creditors (gas, electric, phone, cell, cable, etc), have student loans to repay, owe $300 on my checking account and now it seems the one place I can actually live I will no longer have as the landlord no longer wants tenants in his house. I cannot afford to wait for bankruptcy court. I need money NOW. If my sleazebag employer had at least had the common courtesy and decency to warn me that the company was in trouble I would have been able to make some sort of preparations. But they left me high and dry and evicted from my apartment. I have been living since July 27 off donations from my family. I don't even know what to tell them at unemployment, as they have only 3 categories for "why you left your job": fired, discharged (laid off), or quit. I was none of these. I simply stopped getting paid. The company still considers us all employees and expected us to all work for free. I am serious about that. They thought we would all work for free. Anyway, I can understand why people would steal. The day before the payroll didn't happen, the company bought 60 new computers -- Athlon 1ghz 1gb ram whiteboxes -- to use as servers. I want at least 20 of them in repayment. I'm not planning to steal them, but I doubt I'll ever see my money (knowing the conman who is the CEO).

      --
      rooooar
    15. Re:Getting wages owed you by DnA+Works · · Score: 1
      Unless, of course, you are a contractor or sub-contractor, in which case, you're SOL ...

      I don't like theft, I don't condone it or do it but what is happening to these people is 'criminal' (in the spirit of the work, if not the letter). Almost none of the time do these people have input into how money is spent strategically or which decisions are made, so accusing them of being stupid/short-sighted is at best irrelevant, and at worse, stupid itself.

    16. Re:Getting wages owed you by AtariDatacenter · · Score: 2
      It doesn't make me sick. I sympathize with the employees, and they should do all they can *within the law* to seek remedy, but this is the way business works. *Individuals* declare bankruptcy all the time, leaving their creditors out to dry; does that make you sick ? Would you argue it was OK for the creditors to sneak into their house and steal the individual's belongings ?

      Yes. They do that. They're called estate sales. They take everything in your house/apartment, and put a price tag on it. Even the smallest thing will get a 10 cent sticker on it.

      I used to go to estate sales, but after having found out what some of them really are, I can't morally justify going into someone's home and buying their stuff for cheap.

    17. Re:Getting wages owed you by segfaultcoredump · · Score: 5, Informative

      Having recently gone through a dot bomb, here is the order of payout:

      1) Employees get paid first. Period. If the company does not have the cash to cover payroll, they are in big trouble.

      2) Creditors get paid second, usually in order of size or importance. This means that the bank gets their money and contractors get their take after the bank.

      3) VC's get whatever is left (if anything). They put their money at risk, they knew the risk, and they stood the most to gain.

      Now, in some states (I'm in colorado), if the employer does not pay in 15 days or so, you can send them a nice little form letter (available at the colorado department of labor's website) that basically says that if they dont pay in 15 days that they owe you triple.

      Now, here is the real kicker: if they still dont pay, you can go after the company and then select officers of the company and the (yes, the ceo himself and usually the head of the board of trustees). Like I mentioned before, they are required to be able to meet payroll, and if they can't, They must lay you off before they run out of money, not after.

      Anyway, that is the way it worked in my case. IANAL, but I play one on slashdot.

    18. Re:Getting wages owed you by tswinzig · · Score: 5, Funny

      What has worked for people in the past?

      Apparantly, stealing as much shit on the way out as possible.

      --

      "And like that ... he's gone."
    19. Re:Getting wages owed you by jmsaul · · Score: 1

      In many states, refusing to pay you probably counts as "discharged." It's called "constructive discharge," and the category can also include cases where the company moves your job more than 60 miles and stuff like that.

    20. Re:Getting wages owed you by scoove · · Score: 2

      ah... if you can /get/ them into bankruptcy court. Many choose to ignore bankruptcy altogether, since lots of nasty "you are not in control anymore" things happen there.

      theoretically, you can force them into bankruptcy. my experience has been otherwise. several years of debtors exams, missing records, stalling, lies, etc. - all effective in stalling the courts until there is nothing worth litigating against.

      look at the penny stock "pink sheet" companies that are reverse-merger products. you'll see this behavior all over the place. in fact, i've yet to find a reverse-merger product that worked...

    21. Re:Getting wages owed you by poot_rootbeer · · Score: 1


      Why haven't you consulted a lawyer yet?

      If you're waiting for Slashdot to slap you with a clue, you've already lost that $7500.

    22. Re:Getting wages owed you by griffjon · · Score: 2

      True story. Employees are first on the list to get paid. As I understand it, this doesn't change even after the company goes under--if it somehow gets cash in, it still goes to the (ex) employees owed.

      --
      Returned Peace Corps IT Volunteer
    23. Re:Getting wages owed you by jeff4747 · · Score: 1

      As someone who got to go through a dot-com disaster, I can definately sympathize. Here's the scoop:

      If the company declares bankruptcy, then the bankruptcy court becomes responsible for paying the debts of the company by selling off the assets of the company. Here's the order that they are paid:
      1. The IRS.
      2. Bankruptcy attorneys (otherwise no attorney would touch a bankruptcy case)
      3. W-2 employees
      4. Secured Creditors (Equipment leased to the company, for example)
      5. Unsecured Creditors, including VC's, contract employees, VISA, etc.

      In my particular case the company has refused to declare bankruptcy, so I'm pretty screwed at the moment. What you can do is:
      1. Report the company to the appropriate Dept. Of Labor in your state. Unfortunately with all the layoffs they're all very busy and your complaint may not get handled any time soon.
      2. Report the company to the federal Dept. of Labor. Ditto on them being so busy it'll take a while.
      3. Report the company to the IRS. They probably didn't pay their payroll taxes if they didn't pay you, and the IRS can force them into bankruptcy where you'll get paid something.
      4. Contact local newspapers and TV stations. They might want to pick up your story to put something in between the terrorist stories. This kind of exposure gets the local government riled up and they can get things pushed along.
      5. Sue the company, forcing them into bankruptcy. This will probably eat up all the money they owe you.

      I wish you the best of luck, as I'm owed thousands and haven't seen much progress in the past 6 months.

    24. Re:Getting wages owed you by Stormie · · Score: 2

      You go after them in bankruptcy court. Michael's intimation that somehow the employees' theivery is justified in these situations is just so stupid it makes me sick.

      Crap. The system is totally set against the worker (who do you think comes last in the list of who gets paid from the liquidated assets of a bankrupt company?), so you got to take care of yourself outside the system. Why should that laptop get sold so some bank the company owes money to can avoid writing off a thousand bucks worth of bad debt (amongst its billion dollar profits for the year) rather than being sold to feed the family of an employee who's been stiffed out of a month's pay? Employees should absolutely be the first to get paid when a company gets liquidated, and as long as they aren't, anyone who takes the law into their own hands is a Robin Hood figure, as far as I'm concerned.

    25. Re:Getting wages owed you by 3waygeek · · Score: 1

      Things must have changed since I went through this about 10 years ago in southern California.

      I was working for a startup that owed me several months' back pay (they'd pay out 1 of every 4 pay periods -- just enough to keep everyone around and hopeful), and I contacted the state labor commission to find out my options.

      The commisioner basically said I was SOL -- if the company couldn't make payroll, the state couldn't do much about it, other than force them into bankruptcy, where employees are near the bottom of the list of those to be paid off.

    26. Re:Getting wages owed you by Saurentine · · Score: 1
      I used to go to estate sales, but after having found out what some of them really are, I can't morally justify going into someone's home and buying their stuff for cheap.



      You shouldn't worry about the morals of going to an estate sale. Whatever doesn't sell on the first day gets discounted on the second. On the third day, they'll consider ANY offer, no matter how low.



      The fact is, the more people who go to estate sales, the better it is for the estate, regardless of whether it's a death estate or a bankruptcy estate.



      If it's a death estate sale, the heirs want to generate enough money to cover the deceased's bills. Anything left over goes to them, so you know they want as many buyers as possible. After all, just like dot-bomb workers, the heirs have usually cherry-picked the best stuff out of the estate before the sale without telling anyone in the legal system.



      If it's a bankruptcy estate, and the sale doesn't generate enough to cover the debts, then the debtor frequently owes the remainder after the sale. If the sale generates more than the debt, which happens very, very rarely, the debtor gets a check for the excess amount. That's why you're doing the debtor a favor by going to his bankruptcy estate sale. With the new bankruptcy laws being pushed through in the US by conservatives, the debtor will almost always owe the remaining debt after the estate sale, so do both the debtor and yourself a favor and go to any estate sale that interests you.

      IANAL.

    27. Re:Getting wages owed you by AtariDatacenter · · Score: 1

      Interesting. Thank you.

    28. Re:Getting wages owed you by segfaultcoredump · · Score: 1

      It also varies from state to state. My case involved colorado. California has their own laws on the topic. YMMV, so se a real lawyer. In the end, you should at least get paid before any investors (if there is anything left).

      As an interesting side note, it seems that only salary and accrued vacation (not pto, vacation) is protected in colorado. So, while I did get paid, the policy premiums for our life and medical insurance were not covered for the last month (actually just the last 8 days of employment). (this is why i carry my own life insurance in addition to my employers). that said, my employer was nice enough to send me a check for $14.95 to cover the cost of a perscription that my wife had filled 3 days before I got caned.

    29. Re:Getting wages owed you by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      hell yeah, i got a sony vaio, 2 powerbooks, a mini dv cam, and a couple of hubs. If I knew how impending things really were, i'd have gotten more, too. fcuk them all, the leasing companies, the venture capitals, the idiots that ran the company into the ground. i took that mess and sold it on ebay and bought some pampers, so what....

    30. Re:Getting wages owed you by excesspwr · · Score: 1

      I know this is way off topic, but where at in colorado? (I'm in CO as well so just curious and this story sounds familiar)

    31. Re:Getting wages owed you by Evro · · Score: 1

      With what money? Can you recommend one in New York State that is willing to work for free?

      --
      rooooar
    32. Re:Getting wages owed you by Jah-Wren+Ryel · · Score: 2, Informative

      You forget:

      0) The IRS gets their cut and any back taxes, no exceptions. Anything left over then gets split up among the various creditors.

      This is true for all 50 states and any territories.

      --
      When information is power, privacy is freedom.
    33. Re:Getting wages owed you by Evro · · Score: 2

      It doesn't hurt to ask here as many people may have gone through the same thing. I'm sure this person is also looking for information from other sources as well. This respose was totally uncalled for, and I pity you and the dull life you must have if you have to negatively reply to someone harmlessly asking for information from anyone who may have been in the same situation.

      --
      rooooar
    34. Re:Getting wages owed you by sgt_getraer · · Score: 1
      The company still considers us all employees and expected us to all work for free. I am serious about that. They thought we would all work for free.

      Actually, you've lucked out here. Obviously your company is a start up, because they don't have the business moves down yet. Take them to court. As long as they stay in business, they're fair game for lawsuits. Bankruptcy would give your company protection, but it doesn't sound like they're smart enough for that.

      Small Claims court costs about $50 to file a complaint in. See a laywer. They'll be salivating to take your employer apart.

    35. Re:Getting wages owed you by tshak · · Score: 2

      Go to bankruptcy court? Please. This wouldn't be an issue if it was so easy. Yes, theivery is wrong, but don't act like there's not a valid reason for this discussion. There's NO SYSTEM IN PLACE in the American legal system to ensure that employees get paid. PERIOD. I've been through it, hundreds of others have, no matter what anyone says, THE LAW IS NOT ON YOUR SIDE in this manner. (Sorry for the caps but I'm a little passionate about this subject).

      --

      There is no longer anything that can be done with computers that is nontrivial and clearly legal. -- Paul Phillips
    36. Re:Getting wages owed you by mindstrm · · Score: 2

      This is interesting.
      In Canada, the board of directors will be held personally liable for employee wages, if they aren't paid. I don't know if this follows for all creditors (I doubt it... otherwise what's the point of incorporating).. but wages, definately. The employee is #1.. they are the first-paid creditor.

      As for taking equipment for wages owed.... it IS theft... that's something for a bankrupcy court to decide.. but I have trouble seeing it as 'wrong'.

    37. Re:Getting wages owed you by sar-fu · · Score: 1

      Not paying employees is a CRIME and is punished as such. This is really not a matter of small claims court.

      Contact the state attourey general, in New York state there is a fine and possible JAIL TIME for corporate officers who allow this!

      You may also be able to recieve tripple damages!

      http://www.oag.state.ny.us/contact/addresses.htm l# hotline

      http://www.oag.state.ny.us/workplace/employer.ht ml

    38. Re:Getting wages owed you by discogravy · · Score: 1

      I've seen this happen, and in fact have picked up some really nifty stuff dumpster diving. my first three (3) linux boxes were snagged from dumpsters outside tech companies. and they're great for cannibalization for other, better boxes too. So please, don't steal, throw the boxes away. (for me.)

    39. Re:Getting wages owed you by Fujisawa+Sensei · · Score: 1

      Sucks to work in CA. In texas you can go after the person who's job it is to do payroll.

      If they ain't paying, find a lawyer who showes up in a bolo-tie and cowboy boots who's willing to work on contingency. Those guys can be nasty. You're ex-wife's divorce lawyer would probably also be good, you don't get paid, your ex doesn't get paied. Oh wait, never mind, this is /.

      --
      If someone is passing you on the right, you are an asshole for driving in the wrong lane.
    40. Re:Getting wages owed you by cpt+kangarooski · · Score: 1

      Contact your state bar and inquire about pro bono programs. Many lawyers do a certain amount of pro bono work, and they may be able to set you up with someone. I know that the school I go to (in NJ, sorry) also does some of that, but of course, we're not lawyers, and we try to only take in people that really have no other options at all.

      (not lawyers... yet! mwahahaha)

      --
      -- This and all my posts are in the public domain. I am a lawyer. I am not your lawyer, and this is not legal advice.
    41. Re:Getting wages owed you by aka-ed · · Score: 1

      I have a hard time imagining that any of these employees were *quite* stupid enough to be owed so much money that they could 'justify' stealing some of the larger-ticket items described in the article.

      I worked for a magazine startup once, where the art director, the editor, and the financier/publisher (a Wall Street weasel if ever there was one) were ownership partners.

      Despite winning a few prestigious publishing awards, the commercial end never quite came together, in part because the art director was a hopeless alcoholic with no regard for deadline. As Production Editor, deadlines were my job. (An impossible position, as the people who I had to lean on regarding deadlines were all owners!)

      Toward the end of our days, as the money was running out, I advised the A.D. that if things wern't working out, perhaps he should "have another drink."

      I was fired, and was paid on the spot. But I was the last person to be paid, though the company limped along for quite some time afterwards.

      The editor, a friend of mine, knew, but could not prove, that the financer/publisher had been siphoning money from the company throughout its two-year run. Shortly after I left, Feds started to come out of the woodwork, but they couldn't prove anything either.

      The editor, whose share of ownership was bought by his hard work, continued to work an additional three months without pay after I left, simply because,a s a partner, he had no choice until the thing was surely dead, working on an issue that never reached the presses.

      The day it all finally ended, he went back to the office to retrieve the main workstation, a high-end (for the time) Mac. But it was already gone, no doubt pilfered by the Wall Street Weasel himself. My friend satisfied himself with a somewhat lower-end Mac and a laser printer.

      His alternative: to sit there and take it in the rear.

      Maybe my friend should not have been swayed by the Weasel when he was first approached with the prospect of doing whatever magazine he wanted to do, with a bankroll of several million behind it.

      But he had bought into it, and he, and his idea, were raped by the Weasel, for short-term personal profit.

      At the time he took the equipment, the company owed him some $110,000 in (admittedly inflated) salary that he had no chance whatever of seeing.

      I am sure my friend violated the law, but was his act immoral? The Weasel was highly likely to be getting the other Mac on his next trip to the office. How "immoral" is it to steal from a thief?

      You could make the argument that every cent I was paid on this job was stolen from defrauded investors who went bust on a magazine start-up that was probably intended to fail. Does that mean I should return my salary? Don't hold your breath, pal.

      --
      I survived the Dick Cheney Presidency 7 to 9 AM 7-21-07
    42. Re:Getting wages owed you by griffjon · · Score: 2

      Yep, I'm in Texas ;)

      Strong employee state, surprisingly. And another state where vocal agreements are binding, as are letters of intent.

      --
      Returned Peace Corps IT Volunteer
    43. Re:Getting wages owed you by HamNRye · · Score: 2

      Since July 27??? You can't get by for 2 months of unemployment?? First of all, you should be getting 60% unemployment insurance, or you didn't work there long enough. Unemployment will cover even droppage in wages. I am sure you have not investigated this thoroughly enough. Second, you should have at least 2 months in savings.

      Now, can I talk about what you purchased in July?? Here you are without the cash reserves to make it 2 months of unemployment, but you still have cable and a cell phone?? Where is your personal responsability??

      You lived from paycheck to paycheck, and so did your company apparently. Also, when did you figure out he was a conman.

      As someone who turned down $90,000+ salaries and stock options for $60,000 at a company that will be around in two years, I feel no sympathies for the get rich not-commers. They forgot the first rule, go to work for a good company.

      He who cast stones shall die from a rock to the temple. ~BOB

      ~Hammy

    44. Re:Getting wages owed you by TekPolitik · · Score: 2
      As to going after the CEO's assets, there are essentially no cases in which you'd have any legal standing to do so, since the corporate veil was created precisely to prevent that.

      I'm not sure about the situation in the US, but in Australia, the directors of a company who keep it trading while insolvent become personally liable for all debts incurred from the point of insolvency. The strict definition of insolvency is being unable to pay debts as and when they fall due.

    45. Re:Getting wages owed you by Ryan+Amos · · Score: 1

      The workers are the first to get paid. Now, should the companies not have enough money to even cover that.. I'm not saying stealing is right, but you have to do something to put food on the table, and I'd feel morally less wrong if I stole from someone who owed me something greater in return.

    46. Re:Getting wages owed you by Evro · · Score: 2, Insightful

      First of all, the salary was lagged by 1 month, so when you get paid, you're not getting paid for the past 2 weeks, you're getting paid for the period 4 weeks ago to 2 weeks ago. Thus, when I didn't get paid one friday, I was owed two paychecks. Then the company didn't offer any explanation for another 2 weeks (during which time I did not work of course). I was already 10 days late on my rent at that point (I had had some financial difficulties prior to that involving medical expenses) and if the job had continued, I would have been in the black within 1.5 months. In any case, with no income and my rent already late, my landlord started eviction proceedings. So the next month or so was spent begging for money from my family so I could have enough to move out of the city where the job was and back closer to home. I had no time to begin the unemployment process. And I don't know where you're getting your (mis)information, but in New York state there is a cap on unemployment of $405/week, from which 10% is deducted for taxes = $365. I had no savings. I left school to take this job. And you wrongly inferred that I still have the cell phone and cable. My statement regarding these items was that I still have the bills, which had accrued for about 3 months due to the aforementioned financial difficulties I had encountered.

      I assumed he was a con man when he decided to lie to both the investors and the public about the plans for the company. Around February it was apparent that he planned to use the company and its product simply as a vehicle to launch his daughter's modeling career (going so far as to claim she and he [neither of whom have ever written even a line of HTML, much less C++] wrote the entire application, both on the client and server side). However, at that time my options were extremely limited as I had only been working there for about 5 months, and my main reason for taking the job was to gain programming experience. 5 months of experience isn't very useful, especially when the project isn't even complete and you've got essentially nothing to show for those 5 months.

      While I'll be the first to admit that I wasn't the most financially responsible person on the block, I don't think any amount of planning could have prepared me for the level of underhandedness to which my employer sank.

      Oh, if anybody is wondering, the company was Aimster, which has now gone so low as to try and profit off the WTC disaster. While the page now claims that 100% of the money generated will go to the Red Cross, it initially said that "a portion" of the money would go to Aimster's "fight for freedom". Then I guess they took a lot of flak for that, and changed it (copying the text nearly verbatim from PayPal's donation page) but I seriously doubt that the red cross will see a dime of any money generated from that page. And I'm pretty doubtful that the poster they're trying to sell even exists.

      A lot of what I wrote above is irrelevant to this subject, but the depths to which Aimster's CEO will sink appalls me more with each passing day.

      --
      rooooar
    47. Re:Getting wages owed you by onyxruby · · Score: 2
      You can force a company, like a person into bankruptcy. In fact this is what happened to Daewoo. They didn't declare bankruptcy, their creditors petitioned the court for this - and won. This certainly holds true here in the states as well. This tactic is somewhat unscrupolous, but even employees can do it. Remember the technical definition of bankruptcy is one of being "unable to pay one's bills".


      You can force someone (corporation, individual, etc) into bankruptcy by proving to the court that the entity is unable to pay their bills. Now, if you go to court and they can prove they can pay their bills, they can avoid bankruptcy. Regardless, the experience is very expensive for an entity (and very bad for their credit rating) and they will usually pay in full to avoid it. Also, if proved that they can pay their bills, you can then effectively put a lien against them. Either way, you can screw them as well as they can screw you.


      Cheers

    48. Re:Getting wages owed you by Stormie · · Score: 1

      The workers are the first to get paid.

      Interestingly, I guess this is the case in the USA (based on all the other comments to this story). It certainly isn't in Australia or the UK (the only two countries I've lived and worked in). Apologies to any Americans who were left wondering what I was exploding about. :-)

  9. i never actually took that much by unformed · · Score: 3, Funny

    But some things I did take:
    Legit sealed copies of Windows 98, Office 2000, etc, which I could use to somewhat legitimize my computer. (at the time)
    A fire extinguisher.
    Lots of food.
    T-shirts.
    Half of a video camera. (The building had the eyepiece of an old Beta video camera stuck into the wall to make it look like a security camera. Obviously it wasn't working)
    Lots of notebooks, papers, etc, for school.

    And, I think that was it....the company never went out of business though; i just took it because no one was using it ;)

    1. Re:i never actually took that much by datatrash · · Score: 2, Funny

      I must admit I never took that much either. Besides the standards, your pens, mouse, coffee, and postage, I had to go in late at night and remove the overhead screen from the meeting room as at the company xmass party a friend who I invited, a librarian (and we all know how they can be prrrrrrrrrr....) got wasted and thinking she was writing on a dry erase board actually scribbled "corporate pigs" on the overhead. Suffice to say someone blamed the mysteriously missing screen on a departed salesperson.

      If you need to verify this story you can check the garbage dumps in Boston)

    2. Re:i never actually took that much by jarty · · Score: 3, Funny

      "I did take...A fire extinguisher...i just took it because no one was using it"
      Yeah. Right. I think they are commonly used in the case of a fire, i.e. not often - be sure to take the life jackets next time you're on a ferry, and remove the air-bag from your friend's car, as they are probably 'not in use either'.

      --
      ------------ jay*arr*tee
    3. Re:i never actually took that much by Pig+Hogger · · Score: 2
      Well, a place I worked at which folded didn't screw me, and I didn't screw them. However, just before closing, the comtroller (who I had befriended when I did a project for him) brought me in a stock room and told me to help myself with the old obsolete stuff in there.

      In there was a working Friden 130 electronic calculator and a working IBM 5100 Portable Computer. Plus several old Contex, Olivetti and Burroughs mechanical calculators, you know the ones baby-boomer geeks used to drool above when they were kids, which all started me nice in collecting those old machines.

  10. two wrongs by regexp · · Score: 4, Insightful
    On the other hand, the fact that it's illegal to stiff your employees out of wages due them, even in a bankruptcy, isn't mentioned in the article...

    If (ex-)employees have a legitimate grievance with their employers, they can bring them to court. If they win, they get paid, and if they don't, they can chalk it up to misfortune and move on. It's ludicrous to suggest that getting stiffed out of wages goes anywhere toward justifying theft.

    1. Re:two wrongs by oogoody · · Score: 1

      Why do you owe anyone a legal response when they
      clearly didn't treat you similarly? Sounds like
      a sucker to me.

    2. Re:two wrongs by sandidge · · Score: 2
      they can chalk it up to misfortune and move on

      And chalk up some legal fees if you don't have one of those "If I don't win the case, you don't pay me" lawyers.

    3. Re:two wrongs by tekniklr · · Score: 1
      And chalk up some legal fees if you don't have one of those "If I don't win the case, you don't pay me" lawyers.

      Not to mention that even if you win, the company can't pay you if they don't have the money themselves. You would actually end up with alot less than you started with!

      There's no point in sueing someone if they don't have any money! Which, assuming they went bankrupt, they don't. :)

    4. Re:two wrongs by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In other countries I could mention, employees are preferential creditors. That means that before anyone else gets anything they get paid as much of their salary as is possible. It seems fucked up to me to have it any other way.

    5. Re:two wrongs by sandidge · · Score: 1

      Welcome to America: A nation for the corporation, of the corporation and by the corporation.

    6. Re:two wrongs by DaveHowe · · Score: 2

      This has a number of sides
      It is pretty awkward to sue a company that has just gone down the pan, owing you a month or more back wages.... and if you wait until the case comes to court, you will almost certainly win - against a company that has already sold all assets and handed over the money to the secured creditors (who aren't going to hand any back)
      however, in some cases the assets are never owned by the company that has just gone under - a number of "asset loans" are just that - loans of the assets (for a nominal $1 rent a year and a stack of shares) in which case they aren't stealing from the dot-comm, but from the rental company (and of course, even if the dot com got real money, it may have rented, rather than bought, major assets such as servers.

      --
      -=DaveHowe=-
    7. Re:two wrongs by partingshot · · Score: 1, Offtopic

      > If they win, they get paid

      How naive.

      --
      Anonymous posts are filtered.
    8. Re:two wrongs by NineNine · · Score: 1

      And even if you CAN recover your money (and recovering 100% of it is not likely), you generally end up oweing the lawyer 33%, which is fairly standard for a case like this. So the absolute BEST case scenario is you walk away with 66% of what they owe you in back pay.

    9. Re:two wrongs by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      If they win, they get paid, and if they don't, they can chalk it up to misfortune and move on. It's ludicrous to suggest that getting stiffed out of wages goes anywhere toward justifying theft.

      It's ludicrous to even start to think that that would work with US justice system. Are you forgetting how much lawyers cost, or people's time for that matter? Tell me, who's going to wait half a year to get compensated properly when they could just pick up some eq and walk out with it?

      Two wrongs don't make right but hey.. In a system that sucks that much, WHO THE FUCK CARES ANYWAY?! You?

    10. Re:two wrongs by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yet, when another creditor (read: company) does it, it's okay, because it's enshrined and ennobled as the seizure of assets for non-payment of debt, which to the uneducated, might sound a lot like it could fit the circumstance of an unpaid employee owed back wages...go figure.

    11. Re:two wrongs by cpt+kangarooski · · Score: 1

      Don't knock contingency.

      Would you prefer that you pay the lawyer up front with no guarantees that you'll win? He's taking a risk, and if you lose, at least you can walk away scot-free.

      --
      -- This and all my posts are in the public domain. I am a lawyer. I am not your lawyer, and this is not legal advice.
    12. Re:two wrongs by _ph1ux_ · · Score: 1

      the thing is that I do not see it as theft. if you owe me compensation for my work. you can pay me in cold hard cash - or nice cold hardware.

      too bad for you that this server is worth more than you owe me. you shouldnt have run out in the first place without letting me know what was coming. call it interest.

      I worked at a dot-bomb where the intentionally hid the actual price of the stock options - and gave us all a line about how (no matter who you were) the stock was currently worth whatever your buy-in value of your options was. this prevented you from being able to trade half for half. but they would never give you the stock price in writing, and depending on which conman on exec staff you talked to you got a very wide range of quotes.

      but when you hear the CEO talking to investers and telling them that the stock is worth more than triple your buy in - then I am entitled to something - and I dont need court to tell me whats right or wrong.

      I know in my heart that it is right that this company compensate me. period.

    13. Re:two wrongs by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ok, let's turn that oh-so-clever argument right around:

      If (ex-)employers have a legitimate grievance with their employees, they can bring them to court. If they win, they get paid, and if they don't, they can chalk it up to misfortune and move on. It's ludicrous to suggest that getting stiffed out of a few thousand in computer hardware goes anywhere towards justifying the actions they take towards employees.

      I don't really give a damn which side the 'law' is on. Just because the law says "Layoffs: OK, Taking hardware: ILLEGAL" doesn't mean morals follow suit.

      I'm not suggesting these people shouldn't be prosecuted if caught -- The law is the law, and morals don't come into it. Similarly, right is right, regardless of what the law says, and if you think you can just screw your employees and not get bitten for it, you've got another thing coming.

      All the companies cry, "Boo hoo, we're beholden to the VC's and BoD, we didn't want to lay you all off, but we had to!" Well, that works out just fine for me, since it's the VC's that are the ones getting fucked out of the cash they would have gotten from the piddling hardware sales.

      Yes, piddling. You been to one of these auctions? Pennies on the dollar doesn't even begin to cover it, it's more like pennies on the tens of dollars. These 100K, 400K, whatever dollar values tossed around are on the PURCHASE price of the equipment, not the RESALE value, which is miniscule enough, the AUCTION value means if you could wipe your ass with that laptop you'd get more out of it than if you tried to sell it.

    14. Re:two wrongs by jerdenn · · Score: 2

      Ah, you forgot taxes...

      Likely the lawyer would take 33% of GROSS, Uncle Sam will take his bite, and you'll be left with cookie crumbs and enough spare change to buy a cup of coffee.

      -jerdenn

    15. Re:two wrongs by skt · · Score: 1

      Because you are a moral and ethical person. Whoever did not treat you the same way is an asshole.. why would you want to sink to their level? Revenge is not the answer here, take the matter to the legal system.

    16. Re:two wrongs by skt · · Score: 1

      morals and ethics do not always follow the law, however stealing is not a moral action by _any_ means. It is impossible to justify stealing from an employer ethically. Morals do change in a society over time, but stealing will never be accepted under any circumstances. I would bet that no society on this entire planet accepts stealing. Layoffs are always difficult for any company to do, but someone believes that they are necessary to keep the business making money. Losing part of your business (see the gateway / AMD story today) is a lot better than losing the entire thing. If Gateway didn't lay off 1200 people and restructure, maybe they would lose their entire business. A lot more jobs will be lost that way.

      I don't have any clue how big businesses make these decisions, but it makes sense to me that reputable businesses such as Gateway are laying off people out of necessity.

    17. Re:two wrongs by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Reminds me of something Ice Cube once said. "Two wrongs don't make a right, but it damn sure makes them even."

    18. Re:two wrongs by ErikZ · · Score: 1

      Of course. EVERYONE has a set of morals and ethics. In this paticular case, mine would involve lying and stealing.

      --
      Democrats or Republicans. They are both taking us to the same place and they are not afraid of us anymore.
  11. If the company is so broke... by Johnny5000 · · Score: 5, Interesting

    If they company is too broke to pay the employee wages, then they should be liquidating the equipment themselves, and using it to pay the employees. Or at least find a place for the money to come from. The workers have to eat. I've got no problem with someone taking matters into their own hands if the employer isnt paying them.

    Reminds me of a story:

    There was this coffeeshop where the owner was really bad at paying the employees on time. So the employees started taking their wages out of the register, and leave a note about how much they took.

    Pretty soon they were always paid on time.

    The moral of the story: if you want loyal employees, dont treat them like shit. And if you treat them like shit, dont be surprised when little acts of sabotage start happening.

    -J5K

    --
    The libertarian solution to the failures of capitalism is to apply more capitalism til the failures are fixed.
    1. Re:If the company is so broke... by cc.Scotty · · Score: 1

      More than likely, the company, who is in fact broke, is also in debt up to their ears. The equipment that is being lifted has probably been leased and isn't really even the companies to give. They couldn't liquidate it if they wanted to without the debtor getting all of the proceeds.

    2. Re:If the company is so broke... by cjsnell · · Score: 1

      There's no "moral" to your story. If an employee is owed wages, they can go to bankruptcy court and submit a claim against the assets like the rest of the investors and vendors. Stealing shit to make a point is wrong and cheats those who have invested much more in the company out of their share of the remaining scraps.

    3. Re:If the company is so broke... by 3waygeek · · Score: 1

      True, but it's unlikely said employee will see a dime.

      I was in a similar situation in California about 10 years ago, and I looked into making a claim with the state labor commission. As it turns out, under CA law (and that of most US states), employees are near the bottom of the list of those to be paid off in a bankruptcy reorg or liquidation.

    4. Re:If the company is so broke... by mrsmalkav · · Score: 1

      liquidating the equipment themselves....

      They tried. But who wants to buy 20+ VALinux boxes (still IN BOXES) in this market? VALinux wouldn't even take them back!! AFAIK, they're still sitting there in my old office, gathering dust. Such a shame....

  12. Why blame myself for the mistakes of others? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

    They may have difficulty blaming themselves when they get laid off, so they direct their anguish at the company.

    Uh, hello? If a company goes bankrupt (usually due to a crappy business model or incompetent management), why should the guy at the bottom (secretary, router tech, janitor) blame themselves?

    I'd say the 80/20 rule holds true here - 20% of the employees are responsible for 80% of the business. If the 20% aren't doing their jobs, then the remaining 80% have a right to be upset with them. After all, the company does have a responsibility to operate in the best interests of all employees, not just the 20% that form the upper management.

    Now, of course, stealing servers, routers and laptops is just wrong, but perhaps this should serve as a wake-up call to the management - it's time to start treating your employees right!

    1. Re:Why blame myself for the mistakes of others? by Rocketboy · · Score: 2
      Employees across the country are feeling disenfranchised. They may have difficulty blaming themselves when they get laid off...


      Now we hit the crux of the matter: (PHB) We're out of business. Sorry, no paycheck or severance, just go home. (Employee) Oh, God: I'm sorry, sir. I knew I should have bought more widgets, but the garage is already full and little Johnnie can't even get into his bedroom any more. *sob* (PHB) Damned whiner! Get out of my way, peasant! Whoever hired you is fired!

    2. Re:Why blame myself for the mistakes of others? by TypoDaemon · · Score: 1

      firstly, does pulling "rules" out of your ass often work to make you look insightful?

      secondly, it is not the responsibility of a business to operate in the best interests of an employee. it is not the responsibility of a business to do anything - they are a free entity like any other. however, it makes sense that they please their customers. it make sense that they keep their workers happy. but they don't have a responsibility to do so.

    3. Re:Why blame myself for the mistakes of others? by JeffFurry · · Score: 1

      After all, the company does have a responsibility to operate in the best interests of all employees, not just the 20% that form the upper management.

      Actually, the company has a responsibility to operate in the best interests of the shareholders, not the employees. They just have a legal responsibility to pay the employees.

      Having recently been part of a startup that, well, stopped, I have thought many times that I should have held on to some equipment, then 'discovered' I had it after I finally got paid (which I figured would be some time after they started selling heaters in hell). Oh, the joys of hindsight.

      One of my former co-workers who got screwed over particularly hard filed a claim with the Bureau of Labor and Industries (here in Oregon), rather than wait for the company to get additional funding to revive itself. The Oregon BOLI has a fund to cover situations like this; they'll pay employees, then go after the company for the funds. Much better, I think, than the individual employees trying to get anything. (FYI, going after a former employer in court will probably result in the few remaining assets going to cover legal fees, rather than to the employees. However, IANAL (TG!), so YMMV.)

      Anyway, I had given up any hope of ever seeing those wages, and so was totally *stunned* when I got an email from the CEO last night. Seems they really are getting funding, and will finally be able to cover those back wages. I'll really believe it when I actually have a check in my hot little hands (or better still, deposited in the bank), but I've bookmarked Ripley's just in case. :-)

  13. just laid off employees? by 2MuchC0ffeeMan · · Score: 1

    well, what about employees that start other companies? i mean, has anyone ever worked for a company, and had their training manual be from another .com, or another bank, etc?

    it's just funny to see other people's letter heads on our stuff....

    --
    Runnin' On Empty .... I'm Still Alive
  14. Psssst! Hey buddy.... by spike666 · · Score: 4, Funny

    ... Wanna Herman Miller Aeron Chair?

    Cheap! only $400 and barely used... only the sweat of 3 dot com geeks on it...

  15. Act like you own the company by richie2000 · · Score: 1
    This all reminds me of that old Dilbert strip when Wally swipes Dilbert's 17" monitor because he (Wally) had never used it. :-)

    I'm currently holding on to a full PIII@550 server system from a bankrupted company. The liquidator knows it exists but it's more or less buried in the inventory list. If he asks for it, I'll see if I can buy it, cheap. If he doesn't ask, I won't remind him.

    Two wrongs doesn't make a right, but two Wrights made an airplane.

    --
    Money for nothing, pix for free
    1. Re:Act like you own the company by Tarpan · · Score: 1

      If he doesn't ask, I won't remind him.

      Hopefully he's not a regular /. reader ;)

    2. Re:Act like you own the company by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Your sig is so fitting for this discussion.

  16. There is a MUCH simpler way to do this. by AtariDatacenter · · Score: 2, Funny

    You don't swipe items when the company has given you the boot. They'll have their eyes on you big time. What you do is you swipe items when you're pissed off at your company for treating you badly. (IE: Hurray! Everyone gets a 10% pay cut!)

    Best way to do this? Very simple. Use your company's shipping and receiving department. That's what they're there for. From you desk, sell office items on eBay. When it comes time to deliver the goods, box it up... at work... and give it to your shipping department (who, no doubt, will want to FedEx, UPS, or otherwise mail it with no later than two day delivery). Make the company foot the bill for getting rid of their own items.

    This message is in jest. Please DON'T try this, gentle SysAdmins. ;)

    1. Re:There is a MUCH simpler way to do this. by haruharaharu · · Score: 1

      Gentle Sysadmin? What planet are you on?

      --
      Reboot macht Frei.
    2. Re:There is a MUCH simpler way to do this. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What you do is you swipe items when you're pissed off at your company for treating you badly.

      He's right! At my former company I was sick of the constant uncompensated overtime that came up without any prior notice (i.e. "Oh, we didn't start working on tomorrow's presentation until noon today. We need you to stay tonight to support the people stuck working on it."). I was sick of office-politics bullshit that was never once in my time there superseded by common sense and/or logic (i.e. the Chairman who sees his office one day per month gets the 1GHz machine, the designers get the slower ones). Mostly, I was sick of the complete lack of appreciation by management. So I found a new job, gave my notice, and the week before I left I came in with a huge stack of blank CDs, rifled through the Big Cabinet O' Software, and spent the day sitting in my office making a copy of every software title that was of any interest to me at all-- most of which was very expensive Microsoft and Adobe stuff.

      Not to sell it or distribute it, mind you, but to use it and learn its ins and outs, and get in some small way a bit of the training I had been promised for years but never got except for one crappy NT class.

      I'm much happier in my new job, where I get attaboys from my boss all the time, get cash performance bonuses quarterly, have much better hours, have a non-hellish commute, and am making money hand over fist with my "stolen" knowledge. :-)

  17. Shocking! by junkpunch · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    Readers on /. trying to justify theft! Wow, that is really shocking.

    Oh, wait...no it's not.

  18. The cheek by osiris · · Score: 1
    "They may have difficulty blaming themselves when they get laid off, so they direct their anguish at the company."


    So its the employees fault that the company pissed all their money up the wall during the dot com boom and produced nothing but vapourware? I think not, the cheek of actually blaming the employees for going bankcrupt like that.

    Im sure they would have preferred to have their jobs myself.

  19. Gettting stiffed by the boss by Kagato · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Slashdot should include "IANAL" in the article. While there are several state and federal laws to "protect" workers from these types of situations there isn't much in the area of enforcement. In a perfect world the employer is required to tell the staff that they are going to file papers when they decided to draft them. Not after the file. In practice the employees usually find out when they go do work and find a notice pasted to a locked door.

    IANAL

  20. Simple reasoning. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I am posting this anonymously for obvious reasons.

    The company I work for at the moment is going through chapter 11 bankruptcy protection, before I started they had a history of missing paychecks which many feel will never be payed.

    They have not missed any of my paychecks, however they have provided a few hundred dollars worth of equipment so I can work from home instead of relocating to them.

    And if I do end up being owed money I may very well choose to take, AS PAYMENT, that equipment, at whatever the market prices are for those parts new at the time (which seems more then fair).

    Some may consider that theft, but I honestly can't see how, IF you are honest about it and actually tell the company that you are taking said assets instead of cash if they don't want to pay you.

    I do have to wonder how many companys turn around and report such as theft though.

    A programmer, who hopes for the best but keeps reality in mind.

    1. Re:Simple reasoning. by streetlawyer · · Score: 2, Insightful
      Some may consider that theft, but I honestly can't see how

      Consider the other creditors (including other employees) of the bankrupt company, who would otherwise share in the potential value of those assets.

    2. Re:Simple reasoning. by Amazing+Quantum+Man · · Score: 2

      The company I work for at the moment is going through chapter 11 bankruptcy protection, before I started they had a history of missing paychecks which many feel will never be payed.

      Then you were an idiot for signing up there. You knew what was going to happen if the company went/goes under.

      --
      Fascism starts when the efficiency of the government becomes more important than the rights of the people.
    3. Re:Simple reasoning. by aka-ed · · Score: 1
      Consider the other creditors (including other employees) of the bankrupt company, who would otherwise share in the potential value of those assets.

      If he can work out a means of payment with the employer why is he obligated to concern himself whether other employees are doing the same or not? That is the employer's obligation, not his.
      When I got fired from a startup by calling my boss a drunk (which he was), I got paid for the first time in a month and left the company even-up. My fellow employees never were paid or that month, and some got screwed for as much as thre months' more salary.
      Was I wrong to accept my severance check?

      --
      I survived the Dick Cheney Presidency 7 to 9 AM 7-21-07
  21. Lawyer: not quite by hawk · · Score: 4, Informative
    I am a lawyser, but this is not legal advice. If you need legal advice, contact an attorney licensed in your jurisdiction.


    >On the other hand, the fact that it's illegal to stiff
    >your employees out of wages due them, even in a bankruptcy, isn't
    >mentioned in the article...


    Uhh, no. That's not the law. There is certainly a breach of contract when an employee does not get paid, but in the absence of prior intent not to pay, it's generally not a crime.


    IN bankruptcy, it's a special set of rules. Employee wages up to a fixed amount (I forget the current number) are a priority claim; they get paid before the regular debts (but only to that amount). One of two things happen: 1) they all get paid, or 2) the "self help" took away assets that would have been used to pay all employees.


    Walking off with the expensive stuff could solve the former employee's food and housing nees for a couple of years, though . . .


    hawk, esq.

    1. Re:Lawyer: not quite by tekniklr · · Score: 1

      Unless this is a federal law, this stuff would vary from state to state though. So you may both be correct- just not for the same place. (IANAL)

    2. Re:Lawyer: not quite by jallen02 · · Score: 1

      Walking off with the expensive stuff could solve the former employee's food and housing nees for a couple of years, though . . . Implying that the insurance covers the "self help" loss?

      Jeremy

    3. Re:Lawyer: not quite by hawk · · Score: 3, Informative
      >Unless this is a federal law, this stuff would vary from state to
      >state though. So you may both be correct- just not for the same place.
      >(IANAL)


      Bankruptcy is federal.


      The criminal aspect of state law will not very all that much among states (you really couldn't cross the intent line I draw above and pass constitutional muster . . .), but civil responses will vary. I'd be shocked, though, to find a state in which wandering off with the goodies is legal . . .


      hawk, esq.

    4. Re:Lawyer: not quite by hawk · · Score: 4, Funny
      >Implying that the insurance covers the "self help" loss?


      oh, no. Implying that the self-helper gets three squares a day and an opportunity to do laundry for the guy with the most cigarettes . . .


      :)
      hawk

    5. Re:Lawyer: not quite by aozilla · · Score: 2

      I'd be shocked, though, to find a state in which wandering off with the goodies is legal . . .

      What about just refusing to return borrowed equipment (such as a home use computer) until your salary was paid? It seems like that would be breach of contract, not theft. Sure you might get sued in civil court, but at least you protect yourself from the companies executives disappearing and never being heard from again. IANAL, so this is completely speculation.

      --
      ok then your [sic] infringing on my copyright! Could you as [sic] me next time before STEALING my comments for your own?
    6. Re:Lawyer: not quite by King+Babar · · Score: 3, Interesting
      I am a lawyser, but this is not legal advice. If you need legal advice, contact an attorney licensed in your jurisdiction.

      [Completely irrelevant aside: if somebody claims to be a "lawyser", shouldn't they be dispensing "legsal advice" or maybe "legal advuice" or something like that?]

      Uhh, no. That's not the law. There is certainly a breach of contract when an employee does not get paid, but in the absence of prior intent not to pay, it's generally not a crime.

      OK, so how high a standard do you need for "intent" here? Here's what I think is an ordered list of possibilities as enunciated by a typical dot com executive; where would a judge start to laugh in your face?

      • "We really expected the VCs to give us the next round given our previous contract. Maybe we can make payroll if sales pick up a bit..."
      • "The VCs have cut us off, and we have no sales, but if we don't hire these techs we have no chance..."
      • "The VCs have cut us off, but they did approve my spiffy severance package. That doesn't leave enough for next month's payroll, but we need a new sysadmin..."
      • "The VCs have cut us off, we're stiffing our creditors, and I took the last of the cash as my bonus, but I need a tech to make this place seem lively enough to attract a buyer..."
      • "The chapter 11 filing doesn't come until the fifteenth, but I need a couple of warm bodies around here so I have plausible deniability when f*ckedcompany.com pre-announces our reduction in force..."
      • "Talk about your desperately deluded future ex-employees! While there's no money to even think about paying her boyfriend, what the heck? I'm not going to return that last favor in kind, but I'm in a generous mood just now..."

      I'm guessing you have to get all the way to the chapter 11 filing case to nail down intent; am I right?

      --

      Babar

    7. Re:Lawyer: not quite by jallen02 · · Score: 1

      Heh, Roger That.

    8. Re:Lawyer: not quite by slapnuts · · Score: 0

      If you tell your boss you are not giving him his computer back and he calls the cops you will go to jail. If you say you can't find it or "when I saw it was missing from my locked residence I just figured the company picked it up" your boss will withhold an inflated amount from your pay.

    9. Re:Lawyer: not quite by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      while (timothy->post) {hawk->SlapDown(stupid_comments);}

    10. Re:Lawyer: not quite by grue23 · · Score: 2


      >On the other hand, the fact that it's illegal to stiff
      >your employees out of wages due them, even in a bankruptcy, isn't
      >mentioned in the article...

      Uhh, no. That's not the law. There is certainly a breach of contract when an employee does not get paid, but in the absence of prior intent not to pay, it's generally not a crime.

      I bet that's why iXL kept 'mysteriously losing' the paychecks of ALL its contractors for at least four or five months in a row rather than actually saying that they weren't paying htem. Oddly enough, the contractors seemed the ones who were least likely to steal things from them when my office got shut down.

    11. Re:Lawyer: not quite by cpt+kangarooski · · Score: 1

      It's not legal advice because 1) if he were wrong, and you had operated under the assumption that he was correct, he could be held liable and 2) because lawyers can only practice in jurisdictions in which they're licensed. Unless he's allowed to practice law in your state, he'd be seriously screwing himself over.

      --
      -- This and all my posts are in the public domain. I am a lawyer. I am not your lawyer, and this is not legal advice.
    12. Re:Lawyer: not quite by TekPolitik · · Score: 2
      If you tell your boss you are not giving him his computer back and he calls the cops you will go to jail.

      Er, possibly not. Larceny (the old common law name for the offence usually referred to as theft) requires the taking of the thing with the intent to deprive the owner of its use in perpetuity. The intent has to accompany the taking, so if you took the thing on loan intending to give it back later, but then change your mind and decide to keep it, there's no larceny.

      Of course your jurisdiction may have other criminal laws that apply, or may have overridden the common law definition of larceny, but the more general rule is as I have described.

      On the other hand, the keeping is a conversion, but conversion is normally a civil matter rather than a criminal matter (the cops won't get involved). In this case, the employer can either institute a civil action for conversion (which makes the kept thing yours and requires you to pay for it), in which case you can cross claim for your wages to cancel out the amount awarded. Alternatively they file a write of replevin and come and reposess it, followed by an action of detinue (or just take the action in detinue and take the machine back after succeeding). In that case you're worse off to the extent of court costs.

      Keeping of that which you legally have in your posession as security for payment is actually a common act that is not necessarily illegal unless specifically made so in your jurisdiction.

      IANALY,TINLA

  22. exaggerated losses by uucp · · Score: 2, Funny
    used his security clearance to steal $445,549 worth of computers and equipment, including logic-card modules and oscilloscopes.

    Yah, I can see the itemization now.
    • One Computer $2,000.00
    • One Oscilloscope $43,549.00
    • One Logic-Card Module Ummmm $400,000.00 Yeah, that's the ticket!

    --
    Sig (appended to the end of comments you post, 120 chars)
    1. Re:exaggerated losses by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Not at MOT. Any idea what a full color multi-band CDMA analyzer costs? About $300k was the bill in our department at the time. Of course, every engineer in the department had one sitting on their desks; whether or not they even knew what to do with it. Us software folks liked to watch the pretty lines go slowly by.

  23. Unusual item for sale ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    Our company is currently in the process of a "merger" (yeah right - they're 20 times our size). There's only a few (3) of us who know that years ago we obtained a class B IP (no, I'm not going to say which one). If things go badly, we figure, we should be able to transfer that without anyone knowing. Shit, the company is so clueless, they don't even know they own it.

    What's that worth?

    1. Re:Unusual item for sale ... by NoseyNick · · Score: 4, Informative

      It's worth exactly ZERO, as you should know. You can't charge for IP addresses. You can charge an admin fee for the application/assignment process, you can charge for routing them, you can charge for providing transit to them, but you can't charge for the IP addresses themselves. Furthermore, they're not transferable, you'd have to return them to RIPE/ARIN and get them re-allocated.

      --
      Nick Waterman, Sr Tech Director, #include <stddisclaimer>
    2. Re:Unusual item for sale ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I know it can't be "sold" exactly (although we paid another firm for it - in fact ARIN still says the name of the other comapany), but there's still got to be a way of making some money out of this. After all, a block of 65,536 consecutive IP addresses is kind of hard to come by these days.

      Any devious ideas anyone?

  24. Jeezuz... by ryanvm · · Score: 2
    On the other hand, the fact that it's illegal to stiff your employees out of wages due them, even in a bankruptcy, isn't mentioned in the article...

    You're right Michael - it's okay to steal and loot because some employers can't afford to make their payroll.

    WTF are you thinking?

    1. Re:Jeezuz... by sql*kitten · · Score: 5, Funny

      You're right Michael - it's okay to steal and loot because some employers can't afford to make their payroll.

      Uhh, CmdrTaco? Better keep an eye on Michael when Andover starts running out of cash...

    2. Re:Jeezuz... by michael · · Score: 1

      Feh, I don't work on site... Stealing my "work" computer would be challenging since it's mine.

      But yes, I have great sympathy for employees who are owed wages and take property in lieu of cash. I know many people who were paid in computing equipment, entirely legitimately, by failing dot-coms. And employees who are owed back pay get paid *first* in bankruptcy proceedings, so these people would be getting their wages anyway, only with a lot more hassle and paperwork.

      For what it's worth, when VA laid people off earlier this year, they treated people decently, paid a decent severance, and didn't have (as far as I know) any sort of theft problem. Treat people decently, they'll treat you decently.

    3. Re:Jeezuz... by sql*kitten · · Score: 2

      But yes, I have great sympathy for employees who are owed wages and take property in lieu of cash

      I see where you're coming from. But getting laid off with no severance package *and* getting into trouble with the law at the same time isn't going to help anyone if they find their employer imploding around them.

      I heard a story of a rival company to one I used to work for. They were teetering on the edge of bankruptcy, and when some employees came in one morning and found the place locked up, they panicked, broke in and made off with a bunch of equipment. Turned out that the office manager had just overslept that morning...

      Treat people decently, they'll treat you decently.

      Aye, sometimes it really is that simple.

    4. Re:Jeezuz... by BillLumberg · · Score: 1

      I got laid off minus 2 weeks of back pay, no vacation pay, and a letter circulated by the Head of legal counsel to be not commit any illegal acts. Next thing I know I find out that they had subtracted our 401k for the last two months, but failed to place that money (that I earned) into my 401k account. It also caused our 401k plan to be temporarily frozen because the company failed to pay the maintenance fees. This head legal counsel used to be the FCC chairman. I think that she would know the legality of her actions. I don't believe that taking our 401k was legal, then accuse/threaten us with legal action if we recouped some of our lost wages. F'n hypocrisy.

      --
      Bill Lumberg
    5. Re:Jeezuz... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "...they panicked, broke in and made off with a bunch of equipment..."

      That is a damn funny story!

    6. Re:Jeezuz... by unitron · · Score: 2

      I'd be very interested to know the names of the company, its head legal counsel, and its head of accounting. If the 401K deductions didn't wind up where they were supposed to, it would be very interesting to see where on the chart of accounts the corresponding entry did wind up.

      --

      I see even classic Slashdot is now pretty much unusable on dial up anymore.

    7. Re:Jeezuz... by discogravy · · Score: 1

      So it turns out that VA was just being cautious when they got out of the hardware business...

      Michael: [Sinister Laughter] When they fire me, I'm stealing 500 copies of...LINUX SOFTWARE! [Sinister Laughter]

      CmdrTaco: Uh, Mike, that's free anyway. Besides, Katz took all the boxes.

      Michael: Why did he get all the boxes first?

      CmdrTaco: According to the poll, everyone wanted him gone first. You and CowboyNeal tied for 2nd.

  25. Thievery. by saintlupus · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Well, if this "Akron-based company" treated their employees anything like my last employer did, it's no surprise. We were told three months ahead of time that we were being laid off, and then security guards were stationed inside the building to watch us all the time.

    Nothing quite like making your employees feel like criminals when it comes to making them want to steal things.

    --saint

    (I know, this is probably chock full o' poor grammar. I just got to work and I'm working on my first cup of coffee. Deal with it.)

    1. Re:Thievery. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      At least you have three months. Usually you get booted out in an hour or so.

  26. Bankrupt Companies by timmy+the+large · · Score: 2, Interesting
    My father had a VAR for Intergragh & Bently. when he ended up going bankrupt, because Bently changed there pricing retroactivley to a year back, he paid his employees and then gave stuff to some of them(and me) under the reasoning that it was all going to the bankrupcy court anyway.

    Same thing happened a t a company I worked for about a year ago. The owner gave me a couple off nice office chairs, a computer desk, some monitors and a bunch of other stuff. They know people are giving it away as a kind of extra severance pay.

    That's probably the main reason insurance companies won't pay for stuff.

  27. Make sense. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Have you ever tried moving a Sun Ultra Enterprise 4500 to your CUBICLE, yet alone, out the DOOR? For something so SMALL, that thing feels like it is made out of lead.

    1. Re:Make sense. by telstar · · Score: 1

      That's why you hire the shipping company and bill that to your company as well! Obviously!

  28. Double standard by ZanshinWedge · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Whenever an employer fucks up a pension plan, or terminates someone without good reason it's always "a shame". But whenever an employee walks away with a printer you can buy for 100 bucks on eBay after their severance package has been cancelled and their pay check bounced, it's "a criminal act".

    1. Re:Double standard by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's right. One's not illegal and one is. Boy, the /. crowd is getting smarter every day!

    2. Re:Double standard by passion · · Score: 2

      Two wrongs don't make a right...

      but three lefts do :)

      --
      - passion
  29. tchotchke by mikosullivan · · Score: 1
    A variant of
    chachka:


    A cheap showy trinket.




    A stapler is showy?

    --
    Miko O'Sullivan
  30. Re:exaggerated losses -- by AtariDatacenter · · Score: 5, Funny

    One computer: $2,000
    One oscilloscope: $43,549
    Having your story linked to Slashdot: $PRICELESS

    For some bankrupcies, there are severance checks. And for others, fivefingerdiscount.

    Fivefingerdiscount. It's everything you want to have.

  31. When I got laid off... by ras_b · · Score: 2, Informative

    ...I had an escort that walked with me from the final meeting to my desk, then watched as I packed up what was mine, and made sure that I didn't walk with anything expensive. I wouldn't have stolen anything anyway. But I still took advantage of the company's unfortunate situation. They had several foosball tables and were planning on moving to a smaller office after the layoffs. I was able to purchase a foos table off of them for a fraction of the real price, and it was in mint condition. If you are not a criminal and are not willing to steal the equipment, it doesn't hurt to ask if they will sell you what you want for cheap.

    1. Re:When I got laid off... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ...I had an escort that walked with me from the final meeting to my desk

      Yes, but did this company paid escort actually PUT OUT? Or was it just limited to 'sexy talking' and a dinner date? I wish my company would make a paid escort a company policy.

      We screwed you, huh? Well, here's your chance to get even! We're giving you a company paid escort!

    2. Re:When I got laid off... by jeff.paulsen · · Score: 2

      I was fired once from a job where I had brought my own table into the office. I disassembled it during a screaming match with my manager who thought it was company property. I didn't mind being fired, but no way was I going to leave without my table. He went to get a VP (presumably to stop me) and found that it was, in fact, my table. When he came back he told me that it was OK, I could have the table. No shit, asshole - it was mine all along.

      I still hate those fuckers.

      --
      -- Jeff Paulsen
  32. This is nothing new by s4ltyd0g · · Score: 1

    This has been going on all along and not just with failed .coms

    I worked for a company in Marocco where the same thing happened. The company basically just abandonned the employees who ended up leaving with servers, routers, the company truck, ...

    Was it wrong? I suppose so but can you blame them?

  33. Much ado about nothing by dillon_rinker · · Score: 5, Insightful

    This article is misleading and sensationalistic.

    The most common items stolen from tech companies by employees are laptops and handheld computers that cost less than $1,500 per item, asset managers say. But they are also seeing an increase in big-ticket theft.
    The writer gives ZERO facts in support of this.

    One anecdote cites someone who lifted $445,549 of equipment
    The anecdote refers to a MOTOROLA (hardly a dot-bomb) employee. The employee used his "security clearance" to steal a lot of stuff; I'd infer that there were multiple thefts over time while still employed. Either that or Motorola is too stupid to disable employees' access cards when they fire them, or maybe their security guards let people cart out half a million dollars' worth of equipment whenever they feel like it.

    The second largest number mentioned is $100,000...
    somebody had cut a hole through the wall and stolen $100,000 worth of computers.
    This is a flat-out case of robbery robbery. The writer carefully worded it to make it look to a casual reader like an ex-employee had stolen it but gives ZERO evidence for this proposition.

    The only news here isn't news...laptops and PDAs walk off. If you call someone and say "Don't bother coming back," they'll take you at your word, even if they've got a company laptop at home.

  34. Perhaps if by loggia · · Score: 1

    Perhaps if companies valued their employees as much as their equipment they wouldn't have this problem...

  35. I've been wrong all along... by pongo000 · · Score: 4, Funny
    "They may have difficulty blaming themselves when they get laid off, so they direct their anguish at the company."


    And all this time, I thought it was OK to blame someone else for getting laid off. Now I come to find it was actually my fault all along.


    Guess I ought to give them back their laptop.

  36. Don't wait around. by AnalogBoy · · Score: 5, Funny

    You've been hired for your intelligence, use it. There are several ways to tell when its time to leave your company.

    1) You work for a DSL Provider thats NOT a bell Leave now.

    2) You see your company on FuckedCompany.com.

    3) Your stock is delisted, OR your IPO Is "Indefinately put on hold".

    4) Your company starts to buy metal folding chairs instead of Areons, saving ~$575.00/ea

    5) You have to start *gasp* PAYING for your cokes.

    6) You work for a dot-com with an unreasonable business model - I.E. Sending a $4 20 Lb bag of furball litter, overnight priority mail.

    7) Your CEO's last job was "PC Technician"

    8) Your company holds "Effective Resume Writing" classes or begins offering discounted copies of "Knock 'em Dead".

    9) You see a copy of "7 Habits of highly unemployed people" laying on your bosses desk.

    Theres more. But if you see any of the above, its a pretty good sign you need to move on.

    1. Re:Don't wait around. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Man! #7 really hit home. My company's (former) CTO had no experience other than Cold Fusion. That, and marrying the CEO, made him eligible for the CTO position.

      Having steered the company into the tarpits, he's now some sort of sales engineer. A job for which he's also incompetent.

      My resume's making the rounds.

      Sorry for posting anonymously, but I think he ocassionally reads /.

    2. Re:Don't wait around. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

      Hmm, I think you could just change #6 to:

      6) You work for a dot-com.

    3. Re:Don't wait around. by andylaurence · · Score: 1
      You've been hired for your intelligence, use it. There are several ways to tell when its time to leave your company.

      Why should you leave? I got £3500ukp when I lost my job for a dotcom going under. I would never have made it without that cash! Redundancy pay is GOOD!

  37. Saw this so many times... by supabeast! · · Score: 3, Interesting

    I worked at one of the massive web consulting shops, and watched it go from 10,000 to about 50 employees before I finally got the golden shitcan award in July. A list of things I saw people steal follows:

    -Aeron Chairs
    -Dell Servers
    -Compaq Servers
    -Dell desktops
    -Cisco hubs and switches
    -Sun desktops
    -A pool table.
    -Microsoft Natural Keyboards
    -Speakers
    -Electronic foot massagers (Really.)
    -Books
    -Any software package known to man
    -Laptops
    -DLT Cartridges
    -Any SCSI equipment you could imagine.

    I could probably make this list longer, but I doubt anyone wants to read it.

  38. FiveFingerDiscount.com? by totallygeek · · Score: 0, Offtopic
    I went there, and there is just an "under construction" page.


    Wanna Slashdot it?

    1. Re:FiveFingerDiscount.com? by aka-ed · · Score: 1
      Wanna Slashdot it?


      Shall I remind you that under the Anti-Terrorist Act this proposal to engage in a Denial of Service attack is classified as a Terrorist Act, punishable by life in prison without parole?

      --
      I survived the Dick Cheney Presidency 7 to 9 AM 7-21-07
    2. Re:FiveFingerDiscount.com? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I warn you that your magical trolling power will be severely limited under the "Anti-Troll Act"

  39. Interesting. by dave-fu · · Score: 1

    I'd always been told that employees had priority over all other owed parties for their unpaid wages and PTO. Nice that they put a cap on that because people being out of money obviously isn't as important as entities out of money, right?

    --
    Easy does it!
    This comment has been submitted already, 276865 hours , 59 minutes ago. No need to try again.
  40. Fault?!?! by icey5000 · · Score: 2, Interesting

    "...Employees across the country are feeling disenfranchised. They may have difficulty blaming themselves when they get laid off, so they direct their anguish at the company."

    Huh? Since I've never been in the 'executive chair' how exactly could it ever be my fault that I am being laid off? Its called being FIRED if I screw up. Seriously, this is passing the buck. It sounds like a consultant selling consolation to management and investors -- you f'd up but its someone else's fault.

    Having played this game twice now, I think I have some experience -- first time gouged three weeks pay (I worked it, but never got paid). The second time I was given a 20% pay cut and told that I would still be expected to work overtime for free and then was laid off two weeks later anyway (no I never worked the overtime, I'm not that dumb). The second incident was very recently (last two weeks) and caused primarily because I work(ed) in the travel sector. My fault? I don't think so.

    While I certainly don't advocate outright theft of large and expensive equipment. I have no trouble whatsoever understanding why people 'take stuff'. The investors and management never have a second thought about protecting their interests -- so why should you?

  41. somebody I know did this, an "acquaintance" by jbeamon · · Score: 2, Informative

    Somebody I know...barely... was working for a little dot-bomb in the making. They decided not to pay the last two weeks of work on time, and the last four weeks of expenses, while having their techs carpool 90 minutes daily to a customer site to continue working. When the paychecks didn't come in, two techs refused to drive until they got back expenses, having an empty gas tank and near-empty wallet. That message went through the bookkeeper to the pres and never got returned.

    Over the next few days, rounds of email were sent requesting back expenses, requesting back pay, then requesting a simple reply. None were forthcoming. One of the techs finally postulated that if the pres couldn't reply, the tech couldn't work. If the tech couldn't be paid, he would accept the tools in his possession in leiu of a paycheck and move on to another job. The pres NEVER even answered. The whole thing just defaulted away.

    I wouldn't guess how "legal" it was. Weeks of work without pay, weeks of expenses without reimbursement. A peaceable solution proposed by the employee and never answered by the boss. It was just ugly. No, "sad" is a better word. That money never did come in. Sucked to be those guys.

    --
    -j

    --
    -j
  42. Working for free by NineNine · · Score: 4, Insightful

    What I want to know is why people worked for free so long in the first place? I know when my paycheck comes, and if I don't get paid, I don't work. It's as simple as that. I work because I get paid. Why did these people continue to work? That seems like a pretty damn stupid idea. I'd rather sit at home in my PJ's, watching TV and sending out my resume then go into work for free. (And in fact, I was forced to do this once).

    1. Re:Working for free by corwinss · · Score: 1

      Some of us don't get paid very often. Like me: I get paid on the 10th for the previous month. So really, if they weren't going to pay me, it could be 41 days before I even found out. Then I might give them some week or so to pay me before I just give up on it... so that's 48 days...

      --
      "Who am I" and "Why are we here" are not the problems.
      The problem is when someone asks "Why are they here."
    2. Re:Working for free by joe52 · · Score: 1

      I get paid on the 10th for the previous month.

      That really sucks. I get paid monthly on the last business day of the month, and I thought I had it bad.

      -joe

    3. Re:Working for free by Ioldanach · · Score: 1

      Say you get paid bi-weekly for the previous two weeks of work. You're supposed to get your paycheck on Friday, and it doesn't come. You walk out the door and don't come back. That's three weeks of pay you're out: The two weeks the paycheck's for, and the third week at the end of which the paycheck would arrive. Most companies pay for the previous week or two's work, not the current week.

    4. Re:Working for free by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You must be salaried:
      We hourly people have to wait for the payroll calculation on our actuall hours of work to be calculated.
      (I get paid weekly, on the last working day of the week, covering the prior week.)

    5. Re:Working for free by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The reason? Stupidity. Plain and simple.

      the average Geek has almost ZERO common sense.

      "What? you cant pay me but you'll keep me stocked in penguin mints? Ok!"

      "I'll get rich next month? OK!"

      "Bend over and drop my pants? OK!"

  43. Leisuretown had this article a long time ago. by dave-fu · · Score: 1

    To wit: Q.A. Confidential. Because while this "news" article demonstrates that people are actually doing it, I don't think it gets down into the nitty-gritty and gives people the real how-to on stealing gear that we both know they're after. And that's where Leisuretown comes in.

    --
    Easy does it!
    This comment has been submitted already, 276865 hours , 59 minutes ago. No need to try again.
  44. Favorite Quote ... by BoyPlankton · · Score: 1
    They may have difficulty blaming themselves when they get laid off, so they direct their anguish at the company."


    Now I understand ... People are wrong to redirect their anger at the management that lays them off. After all, according to the above it's their fault.

  45. Ever heard of the Golden Rule? by dave_aiello · · Score: 2, Offtopic
    Save the talk of disenfrachisement. You may have lost a paycheck or two. OTOH, six or seven thousand people are dead. My aunt's brother, my friend's brother are among them. I'm looking for a job at the moment, as are many of you.

    In all of these situations, people need the help of strangers in order to make it. Fair dealing is the foundation of all organized society. Now more than ever, we need to treat others the way we would like to be treated.

    --
    -- Dave Aiello
    1. Re:Ever heard of the Golden Rule? by Stephen+Williams · · Score: 1

      Fair dealing is the foundation of all organized society. Now more than ever, we need to treat others the way we would like to be treated.

      And here was me thinking that the Golden Rule was something along the lines of "whoever has the gold makes the rules".

      </cynic>

      -Stephen

    2. Re:Ever heard of the Golden Rule? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The golden rule is "Do unto others as you would have them do unto you." If I were an unethical employer and didn't pay my employees, well, I wouldn't be (because of the golden rule)... But if I were, I would have a hard time complaining when employees took some action to get what they're owed.

      And 1000s of people die every day! What does that have to do with the issue of employee justice?

    3. Re:Ever heard of the Golden Rule? by haruharaharu · · Score: 1

      You may have lost a paycheck or two. OTOH, six or seven thousand people are dead

      What, because a national tragedy happens, I shouldn't bitch about not being paid? Sounds like the old saw i got from my mother about starving kids in China

      --
      Reboot macht Frei.
    4. Re:Ever heard of the Golden Rule? by Darby · · Score: 1

      Now more than ever, we need to treat others the way we would like to be treated

      Exactly.
      The employer is stealing from us, hence he must want us to steal from him.
      Golden rule in action.

    5. Re:Ever heard of the Golden Rule? by Ether+Trogg · · Score: 1

      "He who has the gold makes the rules."

      --
      "The dead do not shoo-bop-aloo-bah." -- Kai, 'Lexx'
  46. i got some good stuff by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    if they can pay for the CEO's $8+mill home, and continue to layoff 85% of the company, i felt a little bitter.

    so i got:
    • A dell 1Ghz Laptop (C600 w DVD 512 RAM)
    • a palm Vx
    • sealed versions of Photoshop, Quark, Illustrator, Acrobat, Office 2k, Norton, etc.
    • Windows 2k pro and adv server, SQL server 2k, Interdev, Coldfusion Server
    • 2.5 GB of RAM
    • a 20" monitor
    • 2 cd bruners (SCSI and USB)
    • 2 ultra fastwidw SCSI cards, and 4 20GB ultra drives
    • 2 MS natural keyboards
    • 2 logitec mice
    • 1 4-port KVM switch
    • and a really swank set of speakers.

      • fuckem.
    1. Re:i got some good stuff by sirgoran · · Score: 1

      So I take it we'll all see your sale on ebay then?

      :)

      Goran

      --
      Carpe Scrotum - The only way to deal with your competition.
    2. Re:i got some good stuff by pipeb0mb · · Score: 1

      2 Toshiba Satellites
      Sony Handicam
      2 E-machines desktops
      1 E-machines laptop
      and the chance to email 100s of emails to over 100 investors, detailing the downfall of the lame company.

      best.layoff.ever.

    3. Re:i got some good stuff by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Are you offering the scsi cd burner for sale? If so how
      much? I'm tired of my 1x cd drive I'm using now. :)

  47. Still makes it a double standard... by Svartalf · · Score: 2

    Both are theft. No, I'm not condoning either- I'm condemning both. The latter of the two acts mentioned should be made at least as illegal as the first.

    --
    I am not merely a "consumer" or a "taxpayer". I am a Citizen of the State of Texas
    1. Re:Still makes it a double standard... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Both are theft?

      What does fucking up a pension plan mean to you? First "pension plan" is antiquated so I'll assume they're meaning some 401(k) plan. Let's say that your 401(k) contributions from the company are 100% in company stock. Next thing you know your stock goes from $70/share to $0.20/share. Who's the fool in that situation and where's the theft? Pension plans put into any investment are really just the same. If the pension disappears because the stock market crashes, who's the thief? If you're thinking about anything related to stealing from an employee's 401(k) accounts then that is plain illegal and I'd like to see a case where that has been done without any charges being brought against the company or owners.

      Now what is the problem with terminating someone without a good reason? I might also state the question as how bad does an employee have to perform before you are allowed to get rid of them?

    2. Re:Still makes it a double standard... by dachshund · · Score: 1

      In case you haven't been reading the thread, there are a lot incidences where employers have failed to pay wages owed, or written bad checks. In this case, it seems morally bankrupt not to admit that these companies have done wrong.

    3. Re:Still makes it a double standard... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Right's it's called financial bankrupcy. The employer certainly have plenty of other outstanding bills, debts, or purchase orders that will be unpaid. And it's a perfectly valid reason to go to court for settlement.

      Every other business that deserves payment from the backrupt company will go to court. The exceptions here seem to be the .com loser who are so full of themselves to think they are above everyone as part of the technological elite so their actions are at least intellectually justified if not morally and legally. So they bypass the court system and take matters into their own hands by stealing property.

      I find it funny that you asked if I had been reading threads here. You might have but obviously reading and comprehending are two different things. Show me a single thread when a employee had justification to steal property for their unpaid wages and when there was not a single other creditor who had equal justification to recover money for their unpaid bills. When does the individual employee's right to unpaid wages supercede both the court system and not only the unpaid wages of other employees (who did not steal equipment) but the creditors who probably had outstanding bills even before the first paycheck was missed.

    4. Re:Still makes it a double standard... by unitron · · Score: 2
      I think (and hope) that what you meant was that the former (acts of the employer) should be at least as illegal as the latter (acts of the economically shafted employee).

      As things stand now the latter already is at least as illegal, and most probably considerably more illegal than, the former.

      Legality and morality aren't the same thing even if they frequently intersect.

      --

      I see even classic Slashdot is now pretty much unusable on dial up anymore.

    5. Re:Still makes it a double standard... by dachshund · · Score: 1
      Show me a single thread when a employee had justification to steal property for their unpaid wages and when there was not a single other creditor who had equal justification to recover money for their unpaid bills.

      Whoa! Show me a single place in my post where I said that theft was justified! Why would you ever conclude that?

      I just said that it was crappy for employers to do what some of these people did to their employees. And I said it in response to another AC's post (yours?) which seemed to be defending employers' right to fire people-- a right they certainly enjoy, but it seemed quite beside the point as the issue was paying out money employees had already earned, not guaranteeing their jobs.

      It's ok to fire people, but there's nothing ok about screwing them for the money that they've already earned. We have bankruptcy courts to mitigate the disaster, but this does not make it morally correct to screw any creditor (be it a bank or an employee). And if you know that you are heading into bankruptcy, it's not acceptable to keep employees on to the last minute (when it's clear that you won't be able to pay them.)

      As to why it's worse to screw your employees than your other creditors? Well, in the legal sense, it's not. But remember that the same laws place credit card payments above child-support. Does legal always == moral? Perhaps not.

      Two things, in any case: one, once a check is cut, you've made the decision to spend that money in a certain way-- and (even in the case of bankrupcy) I think it should be considered money spent. Although it may be legal, I can't consider it excusable for a company to drain their bank accounts without first insuring that there are sufficient funds to cover the checks that they've already written.

      Two, from a moral (rather than legal) standpoint, it's (only my opinion) that it's more important to pay back your employees (who have limited protection against your default) than it is to pay an insured bank. This comes back to the moral != legal thing, and perhaps we can agree to disagree here.

  48. No... by Svartalf · · Score: 2

    But the dot-bombs had lots of showy things like cheap, but fancy-looking logoed sunglasses, etc.

    And aeron chairs, while they aren't cheap, are definitely showy...

    --
    I am not merely a "consumer" or a "taxpayer". I am a Citizen of the State of Texas
  49. michael by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    On the other hand, the fact that it's illegal to stiff your employees out of wages due them, even in a bankruptcy, isn't mentioned in the article...

    Didn't anyone ever tell you that two wrongs don't make a right?

    1. Re:michael by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Didn't anyone ever tell you that two wrongs don't make a right?

      So, the US shouldn't bomb the hell out of terrorists?

    2. Re:michael by sirgoran · · Score: 1

      Bomb them?

      No.

      Make them die a long, slow, painfilled death?

      I have no problem with that.

      But to expect that a company that is broke to "do the right thing" and pay its employees is asking too much. Because the people in charge are trying to grab every last cent that they can to line their pockets before its all gone. We as employees are no better or worse than the owners when a company fails. Everyone wants to "get his share" before it all gone. I say grab what you can. If they make you give it back, then by all means do so. If they're too broke to come after you, then keep what you took.

      Goran

      --
      Carpe Scrotum - The only way to deal with your competition.
  50. If you ain't got paid... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

    Employees across the country are feeling disenfranchised

    Gee, I wonder why? My former Employer, Type T, found it acceptable to use our 401k money to cover payroll and other expenses. After we noticed that our 401k's had far less than we contributed we approched our CEO's about the issue and were told that it was indeed true, but it would be paid back. RIIIGHT. After seeing this go on for several months, we had 2 paychecks develierved late of which several bounced. The third was never delivered. To date no one has received their last paycheck, 401k money, vacation pay and expenses.

    For folks at CNET to think that it's "our fault" we were laid off have some real issues to deal with. Keep in mind that if anyone of us had quit and had still had company equipment in our possession, our pay would be withheld until the equipment was retunred. If it was not retunred you can bet you would never get paid. According to CNET, the opposite is illeagal and wrong. PLEASE!

    Until people companies can stop screwing the people who worked until 3a.m. for three months on a high profile client so the bossman can drive a mercedes and have a nice home, this shit is not wrong!

    1. Re:If you ain't got paid... by hearingaid · · Score: 2

      Um, I'm a Canadian, never had a 401k. But isn't that, well, basically your money, just administered by your employer?

      If that's right, then what your former employer did was criminal: it's called theft, and it's against the law. In fact, it's probably pretty serious theft, maybe up in the millions. You should seriously be talking to law enforcement. Those involved in the conspiracy could be looking at some extended jail time.

      --

      my old sig used to be funny, but then slashcode ate it and now it's not funny anymore

  51. It wasn't that long ago... by artemis67 · · Score: 2

    that I read on /. how people were offended about company policies where employees who are laid off were immediately escorted by security to the door, and someone else threw all of the employee's belongings into a box for them.

    You can't have it both ways as a society. If you want to engage in theft in retaliation for being laid off, then expect such draconian termination policies (or worse) to become the norm.

    1. Re:It wasn't that long ago... by unitron · · Score: 2

      If the employee's belongings belong to the employee, then no one else had any business so much as touching them.

      --

      I see even classic Slashdot is now pretty much unusable on dial up anymore.

    2. Re:It wasn't that long ago... by Mr.Phil · · Score: 1

      The place I work did that with the admin previous to me and I was tasked with boxing everything up. Needless to say, that admin got pretty much everything in the room, no matter what it was. The shipping bill ended up being $300 US. I got a call from said ex admin a week or so later thanking me for getting his workstation, printer, 21" monitor and misc software sent to him at company expense.

      Best part about the whole situation was, my (and his) boss checked everything in the box and shipped it along.

    3. Re:It wasn't that long ago... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So, it's OK for an employee to steal company equipment, but it's somehow wrong for a company to pack up personal effects?
      Man, that's so warped!

    4. Re:It wasn't that long ago... by unitron · · Score: 2
      I said that the employer should keep their cotton-pickin' hands off of any employee's belongings. I never said the employee shouldn't respect the employer's property rights.

      I do manage to occasionally have an independent thought rather than blindly "me too"-ing whatever seems to be the currently prevailing line of thinking around here.

      --

      I see even classic Slashdot is now pretty much unusable on dial up anymore.

  52. Re:Jeezuz... good belly laugh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Thanks for the chuckle.

  53. I LOVE this quote! by CrudPuppy · · Score: 2

    and here are the morons trying to explain why the
    employees feel okay about absconding with equipment:

    "They may have difficulty blaming themselves
    when they get laid off, so they direct their
    anguish at the company."


    uh, yeah. earth to psychologists: the people
    getting escorted to the dot-com's door rarely have
    anything to blame THEMSELVES for, and frequently have their
    lying, hot-air-blowing dot-com execs to blame for
    MOST of their turmoil.

    raise your hand of you've heard this one:

    "I know it may seem ridiculous today that you're working
    80 hours a week for 40 hours' pay, but won't you be
    loving life when those options pay off???"


    yeeeah buddy...

    --
    A year spent in artificial intelligence is enough to make one believe in God.
    1. Re:I LOVE this quote! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yep... when I was hired I was told "we'll make you a contractor at the same pay rate as a full time employee... you won't get benefits (which when totalled up equal between $5k-12k/yr in NET pay) or vacation time, but we'll make up for it next quarter when we make you a real employee"...

      ...still waiting... but too lazy to look elsewhere =)

      If the layoff's come my trunk'll be full, and I'll be having difficulty "blaming myself".

  54. No surprise by sirgoran · · Score: 1

    I used to work for a major Hotel and Casino in Reno a while back. They were trying to streamline operations and were going to cut 250 middle management jobs. The only problem with their plan was that they told them on a Friday before a three-day weekend and didn't plan on collecting keys and pass-cards until Tuesday.

    On Tuesday morning the only thing left in the main office building was the carpet.

    The cube walls were gone, phones, computers, copiers, everything.

    Let's face facts. People will always try to "get even" when being fired, laid-off or whatever.

    Goran

    --
    Carpe Scrotum - The only way to deal with your competition.
  55. Death March Projects by scoove · · Score: 5, Interesting

    So some companies can also get used to people producing at maxed out levels of production.

    I just came out of a Death March culture/company. 2.8 years of ever increasing fantasy expectations (what they wanted us to do) combined with ever decreasing fulfillment of contractual obligations (what they did with respect to their contracts to their employees).

    Vacation became regarded early on as "theft from the company" - and was denied. Taking a sick day was regarded with significant suspicion.

    Performance incentives (rewards for completing impossible death march projects) were tossed out - and amazingly, the teams would nail them. At the last second, the company's controller would interfer with one of the last steps (like authorizing a leased line to be ordered) and wala... the team would miss the deadline by hours and lose the bonus. Typical 'Lucy taking the football away' behavior.

    Then salaries were reduced by 25% "to make the business plan look better to investors" (while senior management still drove leased bullet-proof mercedes, lotuses, ferarris and such) with the 25% to be paid at year end as a balloon payment (don't ever try this, friends!). Except guess what never showed up at year end? Then that was used to string you along to stay at the company - sort of a reverse option: "Quit and you'll never see the $50K+ we owe you!"

    Then payroll started slipping. Most of the sane left then. Those who stayed worked for several months without paychecks - buying the promises of great riches. They got booted finally - firing the entire technology office in another part of the country without leaving anyone to control the assets. Their plan? Threaten the just-fired employees to work for free and inventory and package up the goods for shipping, or be accused of stealing anything that goes missing. "If you don't come in next week and ship it to us and something is missing, you know who the investigators will believe kept it."

    Many of the former employees held onto items for collateral. Can you blame them? "Pay up the cash you owe and we'll release the equipment back to you." In the various colo centers the company used, the colo venders are using the same approach with respect to getting the past-due bills paid: pay us and we release your equipment.

    So what's wrong with this?

    *scoove*

    1. Re:Death March Projects by tshak · · Score: 2

      So what's wrong with this?

      America's laws not protecting the employers. It's time for a wakeup call. Companies biggest assests are their human resources. Protecting those human resources IS in the best interest of corporate america (and Americans in general). Protecting a corporation is generally short sighted, as it's usually at the cost of the people who make that corporation run.

      --

      There is no longer anything that can be done with computers that is nontrivial and clearly legal. -- Paul Phillips
    2. Re:Death March Projects by OmegaDan · · Score: 2
      I've only heard one worse thing then that in my life ... My boss is pretty famous for not paying the last months wages for anyone who leaves ... But this was a new one, when one of our people decided to leave, he wouldn't pay his last month and he barked about "not being happy with the guys work" and DEMANDED that the guy RETURN THE MONEY FROM HIS PREVIOUS PAYCHECK!

      Needless to say, a more passionate "Fuck you!" was never heard.

    3. Re:Death March Projects by iturbide · · Score: 1

      Would you mind if I raise a point about an apparent misspelling? It seems you may have wanted to say "employees" Of course, I could be wrong.

    4. Re:Death March Projects by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm guessing this was the only company in the world at the time to work at?

      People who complain about jobs they're at for years... you can always quit, you know.

    5. Re:Death March Projects by tshak · · Score: 1

      You're right - thanks!

      --

      There is no longer anything that can be done with computers that is nontrivial and clearly legal. -- Paul Phillips
  56. Under bankruptcy... by SPiKe · · Score: 1

    Employees are class 1 creditors, meaning they get paid first in bankruptcy. If management avoids bankruptcy, or finds some loophole to keep from paying you, get paid by any means you can.

  57. Having your cake... by FrankieBoy · · Score: 1

    It's interesting to hear the whining about how the world treated these out-of-work people wrong but everyone forgets when these employees were jumping ship from their solid 5% a year jobs towards the big salaries offered by the dot-bombs. Did any of those people ask to see the business plan? Or how about examining the financials? I doubt it. If you roll the dice don't be suprised when it comes up snake-eyes.

  58. Arrogance by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Welcome to the real world. Lots of people have to work just as hard and didn't get anything close to the ridiculous salaries and perks that many dot-commers got. There's remedies in law for lost wages. What about the companies creditors and stock holders (people who actually PAID for the stock) you're ripping off? I think people who do this should be fully prosecuted.

    1. Re: Arrogance by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      You said:
      "Lots of people have to work just as hard and didn't get anything close to the ridiculous salaries and perks that many dot-commers got."
      Are you kidding? Most dot-commers didn't get "ridiculous salaries & perks"; I sure as hell didn't! That's a classist myth perpetuated by a republican-biased press.
  59. Getting Screwed Is Not Just a DOT-Bomb phenomenon by Riplakish · · Score: 2
    How many USians remember Builders Square?

    My brother-in-law worked for them 15 years before the anouncement came that they were going out of business. To keep from having an employee mass exodus so that they could sell of all the remaining inventory, the employees were promised the following for staying the last few months:

    Pay for unused vacation

    A weeks pay for every year of service for severance

    This money was to be mailed to their places of residence the Saturday after the Final closing date along with their final paycheck.

    Saturday arrives and instead of the checks they get a letter saying that not only were they reneging on the promised severance and vacation pay, but they also were not getting their last paycheck.

    My brother-in-law got screwed out of 20 weeks pay.(3 weeks vacation, 15 years service, 2 week paycheck)

    Moral: Stick your company for everything you can get when it comes to salary and benefits, because they have as much empathy and caring for you as they do for the Xerox machine. Don't believe anything management promises, unless it is in writing AND signed. When the company looks like it is in trouble, abandon it like rats off a sinking ship, because that is what they would do to you.

  60. Even when treated well, people steal by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

    While I'm sympathetic to the people that actually got screwed by their companies, even when everything is done as "nice" as is possible, people still steal.

    For example, I work for a dot.bomb (the biggest of the bombs), and when they laid off the majority of the company, they gave people a pretty generous four week severance package. Does it make a layoff somehow more palatable? No, but as one of the remaining employees, I'd hoped I could finally get a decent laptop so I wouldn't have to take my own on the road.

    Nope, all the laptops were stolen, as were all desktop machines faster than 500MHz. So those people going out the door basically screwed the people that are left, because we don't have the money to upgrade or buy new equipment.

  61. This doesn't surprise me. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Funny

    Most slashdotters are completely used to stealing music, so office furniture is the logical consequence.

  62. The thing you have to realize... by artemis67 · · Score: 2

    is that oftentimes the company doesn't own those assets, as the article pointed out. Furniture is leased. Computer equipment might also be leased. The company can't very well sell items it doesn't own.

    Secondly, for those items that the company does own, they actually belong to the creditors. That's whose money paid for those Aeron chairs and the Compaq servers and the Dell laptops. The employee did not pay for any of those things, and is not entitled to them.

    Steal from companies does not hurt your bosses so much as it hurts the companies that trusted in your bosses enough to invest.

    1. Re:The thing you have to realize... by prizog · · Score: 1

      "The employee did not pay for any of those things, and is not entitled to them. "

      The employee's hard work *did* pay for them. If the employee is not payed, and the creditors (which knew the risk and are big enough to take the hit and still feed their families, easily) are, then something is fucked up, and the employee is justified in correcting it.

    2. Re:The thing you have to realize... by prizog · · Score: 1

      No, wait, I take that back. The employee is justified if management has lied to her in the past and if she feels that normal bankrupcy proceedings will not get her paid (or will not happen). Otherwise, I guess the equiptment could be liquidated to equitably provide for as much of everyone's back wages as possible.

    3. Re:The thing you have to realize... by Rupert · · Score: 2

      And what of the 160 hours of work that I have invested in the company. Don't I deserve to be compensated for that?

      [This is hypothetical. I work at a really stable company - so far]

      --

      --
      E_NOSIG
    4. Re:The thing you have to realize... by artemis67 · · Score: 2

      Do you deserve to be? Yes.

      Does that entitle you to steal property that rightfully belongs to a creditor? No.

      I'm not unsympathetic to the problem, but according to the law, the secured creditors get everything. If there's anything left over, then the unsecured creditors. Employees and stockholders fall into the latter category.

      What about that guy in the article who stole over $400,000 worth of merchandise? Let's just assume that that company was able to pay off its secured creditors; then what he stole was coming out of the pockets of fellow employees who are also awaiting compensation.

    5. Re:The thing you have to realize... by artemis67 · · Score: 2

      The employee's hard work paid for them, sure. But did the employee negotiate for ownership of the company when he/she came on board?

      Is it really worth risking prosecution over a few thousand dollars' worth of equipment? You have to ask yourself, Are you prepared to explain in a job interview why you were caught looting your former employer? Chances are, it would never come up. But it might, particularly if you are going for a job that requires background checks.

    6. Re:The thing you have to realize... by slashBastard · · Score: 1
      As far as I'm concerned if the company gets into a situation where it can't pay it's employees then the company is screwd.


      That makes the employees creditors, just like the leasing companies and all the other creditors. IMHO the employee deserves to be on the top of the list of creditors to be paid but in the business world this is not always the case. The employee is justified in lifting some hardware in lieu(?) of wages that went unpaid, if they felt they weren't going to get paid any other way.


      Companies can write off bad debts, people can get evicted from their homes.

      --
      -------------------------------------------------- ---
      No sig. today thank you.
    7. Re:The thing you have to realize... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Corporate whore. Why don't you go and suck your middle manager's dick some more.

    8. Re:The thing you have to realize... by ryanwright · · Score: 2

      I'm not unsympathetic to the problem, but according to the law, the secured creditors get everything. If there's anything left over, then the unsecured creditors. Employees and stockholders fall into the latter category.

      Yeah, and that's exactly the way it should be ::rolleyes::. Better to have a bunch of families face severe hardship than $creditor watch his billion dollar profits sink a couple percentage points.

      --
      -Ryan, with the unoriginal sig
    9. Re:The thing you have to realize... by prizog · · Score: 1

      Well, the idea is not to get caught.... But if they are the sort of company that would prosecute you, then they would also stick around long enough to get compensation through ordinary channels. Besides, I think I would be comfortable explaining to a prospective employer that I don't work unless I get paid.

    10. Re:The thing you have to realize... by skt · · Score: 1

      I don't have any idea how accurate the original statement was regarding secure creditors getting all money, and then if there is anything left over the unsecured creditors get it.. but what if this really was reversed? Do you think that the system might be abused? It really sucks that employees have been screwed out of one or two months wage by some asshole at the top and the legal system really should correct this without a lot of hassles.

    11. Re:The thing you have to realize... by hearingaid · · Score: 2
      ...according to the law, the secured creditors get everything. If there's anything left over, then the unsecured creditors. Employees and stockholders fall into the latter category.

      So close, and yet so far.

      Stockholders are not creditors. They are owners. They get paid last. They get what remains of the company when all the creditors have been paid, if anything.

      --

      my old sig used to be funny, but then slashcode ate it and now it's not funny anymore

  63. Voila by Merk · · Score: 1

    Nitpick: not "wala", "voilà", french for "there it is", or "there you have it".

    1. Re:Voila by Jburkholder · · Score: 2, Interesting
      severly OT: Isn't it amazing how people pick up little expressions and such and use them in everyday speech without having the slightest clue what it means, let alone how to spell it.

      A few weeks ago here I saw someone use the phrase "by enlarge" where they obviously meant "by and large". Before I went and anally nitpicked this post, I had to go and look it up to make sure I was actually right.

      Turns out this phrase has a nautical origin. I didn't know that. I picked this up, just like everyone else, by hearing it in a context meaning "for the most case" and just started saying "by and large" without knowing what it meant. Fortunately, there are abundant resources on the web to satisfy my anal-retentive nit-picking research needs:

      Nautical Expressions in the Vernacular

      "Captain Harris was already explaining by and large. With a piece of fresh Gibraltar bread and arrows drawn with wine he showed the ship lying as close as possible to the breeze: '. . . and this is sailing by the wind, or as sailors say in their jargon, on a bowline; whereas large is when it blows not indeed quite from behind but say over the quarter, like this.'

      The origin is nautical, and had a very precise meaning. It was an order to the man at the helm of a sailing ship, meaning to sail the ship slightly off the wind. A similar command was "full and by" which meant to "sail as close to the wind as it can go."

  64. The law in Canada... by Robber+Baron · · Score: 3

    I don't know what the law says in the States, but in Canada if you are owed wages, the directors of the company are still liable, even after bankruptcy, and the powers that be (Labour Relations etc.) will conduct forensic audits and go after personal assets of the directors to recover your wages. They even have the power examine and negate transfers of property that are done with the express purpose of hiding financial assets. So if your shyster VC had put his property in his kid's name or set up a shell company, it wouldn't "protect" him and you would still get paid. It takes a while and you have to make some noise, but the only way you won't get paid is if there really are no assets left to seize.

    --

    You're using her as bait, Master!

    1. Re:The law in Canada... by dillon_rinker · · Score: 2

      Yeah...but if they pay off legitimate debts, like the telco provider and the hardware vendor and the building lease-holder and the bank, there's not much you can do. Naturally, the VCs in this case know they'll have to do business with all those people again, but employees are just so much garbage...

    2. Re:The law in Canada... by nlvp · · Score: 3, Insightful
      I don't know if it is the same in Canada, but in the UK, you don't get to choose what order you pay people in, the law covering liquidation of insolvent businesses states what order creditors come in, and employees are not at the top of the list (although they still come before shareholders).


      The law very clearly states that you liquidate all assets (including laptops etc) at the best price you can get within a short timeframe, and you pay the creditors off in the order stipulated by the law.


      If an employee is stealing goods from a bankrupt company, they are not stealing from the shareholders or from the VC, but from the creditors that came before them (unless the VC's investment is in the form of cash debt as opposed to equity, at which point he will have a higher position in the payment order).


      There are very sound financial reasons for why this order of payment is considered right. Primarily because if you ask someone to take a purely financial risk in a business (ie Debt but no say in the running of the company or selling them goods or services on credit), then a failure to ensure that they get their money back early within the framework of a liquidation, will make them unwilling to finance this kind of investment in the first place.


      Dot coms were not the victim, by and large, of bad management. They were based on poor investment in the first place as their assumptions about market size were over-reaching from the very beginning. People who chose to dump promising careers in established industry, or chose to not go into those industries in the first place because they thought they could make more money in the dot-com sector, were taking exactly the same risk as equity holders. The equity holders still got paid less at liquidation than employees (equity holders come last in the list). When someone joins a company with a screwed up business model, they are choosing to enter into a risk, and have their eyes wide open. When the company fails, they get paid AFTER the liquidator and the creditors. In a company whose main asset is a "good" idea, there's no way the equipment is even going to be enough to pay off the creditors, so it's unsurprising that a number of employees have received less than (sometimes none of) the amounts outstanding to them. This always happens in liquidations, but you don't always hear of people walking off with the furniture. I don't see why any exception should be made in judging the behaviour of dot com employees when they take things that do not belong to them.


      It's a sad fact of life that when a business fails, not everyone who is owed money gets paid as there isn't enough money in the bank to pay them. Being dishonest by trying to jump the queue when it's not your right is morally ambiguous at best, and criminal at worst.


      To the poster who said his VC screwed around with the assets and somehow clawed cash back - I'm not condoning the VC doing anything illegal/immoral either, so I can't comment on that, although if the VC was an equity holder, I don't see how that would allow them to get money back, unless the rules are very different there.

    3. Re:The law in Canada... by tshak · · Score: 2

      That's because the Canadians have a more human centered vs. corporate centered approach. I was laid off without a pay (one months wages), and the company was STILL IN OPERATION for at least 3 months before filing bankruptcy. The government (Department of Labor, BBB, etc.) couldn't do ANYTHING to get me (or 20-30 other people) their money. We hired PRIVATE attorneys, and THEY couldn't do it either. I know that there was cash, because I saw the transactions from their e-commerce system. I didn't steal anything, because that's wrong, but in a way I understand because America pretty much give you the proverbial smack down unless you are a corporation. To me, this is a violation of human rights. Apparently, our country isn't educated enough to figure this out (not to mention the whole public health care issue). Americans, don't tell me to "move to Canada", I'm here to fight for this country and make it better. Let's learn from our northern neighbors.

      --

      There is no longer anything that can be done with computers that is nontrivial and clearly legal. -- Paul Phillips
    4. Re:The law in Canada... by kin_korn_karn · · Score: 1

      The law says essentially the same thing (it's a states' rights issue in the USA, different states have their own labor laws) here. By the law in the state I was in, the employees -that file wage claims- are the first to get paid. Then the creditors, then the rest of the employees.

      That means nothing, though, because what they did was deflate the company to a paper corp, create a new company, and transfer all assets to the new company, leaving the old company intact, but worthless. There was nothing to sue in bankruptcy court. That's where it's different in the USA (and some guy below me is right, the law is for the PEOPLE up there, not for the highest bidder). It would have taken years to get this through some judge's thick skull.

    5. Re:The law in Canada... by dillon_rinker · · Score: 2

      I was thinking more of a situation where a company pays all debts possible then files for bankruptcy. This is particularly nefarious when a single shareholder or VC owns an interest in the bankrupt dotcom as well as the company that loaned money to the dotcom, rented a building to it, etc.

  65. Rythms bankrupcy disallowed by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The DSL company Rythms tried to pull a fast one
    by declaring banrupcy with lots of money in the
    bank. They tried pay multi-million severances
    to the executive committee. The court caught
    this and disallowed the bankrupcy.

  66. What bull by drodver · · Score: 1

    "They may have difficulty blaming themselves when they get laid off, so they direct their anguish at the company."

    Right, so when I got laid off for doing my job and doing it well it was really my fault? You know since the website worked well and did everything asked and more the whole IT department had to go! I'm not bitter about being laid off, the company was more than fair, giving us our computer and a months pay if we stayed the three months till the meger finished. What bothers me is according to this article's "expert" I should be blaming myself for being laid off in the first place.

  67. How these things happen ... by King+Of+Chat · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I was a director of a small UK software house at the time (started with two of us, employed about 8 when I left). We went through some hard times, but always paid the staff before anything else (I almost got evicted for non-payment of rent several times).

    The guy who was actually in charge was an idiot though and things soon got to creeping up and biting us. One day a factoring company (do you have these in the states?) can take a dislike to you and the first thing you hear about it is a winding up petition and freezing all your bank accounts. To get round this we had to resort to some pretty dodgy (legally) measures - like having another company with a very similar name and using the bank account for that one - to be able to pay anyone (or even trade).

    I bailed out in the end because I just couldn't stand the dishonesty - telling clients that "yes of course it's a legit copy of Netware - we just forgot to bring the manuals with us" and telling employees that "it'll all be OK - you'll get paid next week". I learned a lot in 2 years of working 120 hours a week - mostly about computers, but quite a lot about how not to run a company. At least one of the companies we'd registered went down within 3 months of me leaving. The idiot probably just went on trading and starting up new ones.

    As a director (or whatever) it's OK to take risks (you have to take risks to succeed) but you shouldn't mess around with other people's lives. Your employees have rent to pay, kids to feed and lives to live.

    --
    This sig made only from recycled ASCII
  68. Genernal Mac said it Best by doomicon · · Score: 1

    "A leader is accorded the same level of respect that he or she shows to others"

    --

    Awesome!
  69. MISGUIDED BS by goodviking · · Score: 1
    Blaiming Employees for walking away with some post-its when the company lays them off is nothing compared to the outright theft being perpetrated by the CEOs and boards of these companies. Take a look at Yahoo's 2000 financials. They lost 10s of Millions of dollars and their stock price has dropped 92%.



    Now take a look at the executive compensation for YAHOO for 2000. Looking at Koogle walking away with ~$30 million while the company looses it's shirt, you understand the name: "YAHOO, we can screw all the investors and employees!"

  70. I've done this. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    My former company decided it didn't feel like paying us anymore, so I just walked off with a Cobalt Raq 3 that wasn't in use. I returned it when I got my back pay, mind you, but I wouldn't have had any qualms about selling it if the need arose.

  71. Advocating theft is "interesting"??? by Ars-Fartsica · · Score: 2, Insightful
    Come on folks, a crime is a crime. It doesn't matter if you work 20 hours a week or 100 hours a week - and all you fuckers spend at least 70 of those 100 hours surfing the web, so don't bother with the "I work all the time" argument.

    As for people feeling "cheated" about their options and pay - well, guess what, you entered into that employment voluntarily. If after twleve months you feel the deal was not equitable, you are a moron for having ever entered in it, plain and simple.

    You are the master of your fate you amoral fuckers. Just because life hands you a lemon, you don't get a blank check to commit theft.

    1. Re:Advocating theft is "interesting"??? by dvdeug · · Score: 2

      >>As for people feeling "cheated" about their options and pay - well, guess what, you entered into that employment voluntarily.

      They entered into an agreement to get paid. The other isn't carrying through with their agreement. They have a right to feel cheated.

    2. Re:Advocating theft is "interesting"??? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful
      They entered into an agreement to get paid. The other isn't carrying through with their agreement. They have a right to feel cheated.

      And all it costs them to take a laptop is their own dignity. Evidently that isn't worth much to most of the posters anyway.

    3. Re:Advocating theft is "interesting"??? by Rogerborg · · Score: 2
      • all you fuckers spend at least 70 of those 100 hours surfing the web

      20 out of 60. And I do put in the hours I'm contracted for, and agree that the bastards sitting doing nothing, waiting and hoping for a severance package, are screwing the company right now. I'm going to be a model employee until I'm no longer an employee.

      • As for people feeling "cheated" about their options and pay - well, guess what, you entered into that employment voluntarily. If after twleve months you feel the deal was not equitable, you are a moron for having ever entered in it, plain and simple.

      Yes, because it's always that black and white. I have a mortgage to pay, and my contract has turned from "We love you" to "You're lucky to be allowed to work here" in a series of revisions over the years, each one of which, taken in isolation, wasn't quite enough to prompt me to start the interview round, screw with my pension, admit that my stock options were worthless... I'm not a moron, I'm a spineless wimp. Get it right.

      • You are the master of your fate you amoral fuckers. Just because life hands you a lemon, you don't get a blank check to commit theft

      Again, get your insults straight. I'm immoral, not amoral. I know fine well that it's wrong to steal, but I've make a conscious decision to do it anyway.

      If, and here's the bit you're missing, if I'm pushed to it. Wait until you're in this situation (bent over a desk, taking it up the rear every day with the justification "Because we can") then see if it's as easy to decide right from wrong.

      --
      If you were blocking sigs, you wouldn't have to read this.
    4. Re:Advocating theft is "interesting"??? by Rogerborg · · Score: 2
      • And all it costs them to take a laptop is their own dignity. Evidently that isn't worth much to most of the posters anywa

      I keep my dignity in a Tic Tac container with my ego and self respect. It used to be too big to fit, but the last revision to my contract, where I agreed that I was privileged to be allowed to work here, shrunk it right down.

      Welcome to the corporate world, the one that actually produces products that people buy. It's a big old morass of fear and loathing.

      --
      If you were blocking sigs, you wouldn't have to read this.
    5. Re:Advocating theft is "interesting"??? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      I keep my dignity in a Tic Tac container with my ego and self respect. It used to be too big to fit, but the last revision to my contract, where I agreed that I was privileged to be allowed to work here, shrunk it right down.

      That makes about as much sense as saying that you cut off one of your own fingers every time an employer screws with you.

    6. Re:Advocating theft is "interesting"??? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Get a clue, moron.

    7. Re:Advocating theft is "interesting"??? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting
      I'm a spineless wimp. Get it right.

      Yes, and one who will cash in his dignity for the price of a laptop computer.

      So tell me, when your kids get old enough to understand, how are you going to explain that theft is wrong? I mean, by your acts, you've found some cheap justification for it.

      As for your mortgage, you'll never pay it off with stolen goods unless you really crank up your operation, in which case you've moved from disgruntled employee to full-time hood.

      There's no justification so stop trying to provide one - you're stealing, its wrong, and claiming its to support dependents, besides being bullshit, does not make it right.

    8. Re:Advocating theft is "interesting"??? by Rogerborg · · Score: 2
      • Yes, and one who will cash in his dignity for the price of a laptop computer

      Now now, don't exaggerate. A laptop, a hard drive, a flat panel screen and an 802.11b hub.

      • So tell me, when your kids get old enough to understand, how are you going to explain that theft is wrong? I mean, by your acts, you've found some cheap justification for it.

      Taking from those who have lots and giving it to those who have less is also called "taxation". The world isn't good versus evil, and all your wishing won't make it so. I'll try that tack, although I do also see the pragmatic benefits of lying to them and brainwashing them.

      • As for your mortgage, you'll never pay it off with stolen goods

      Tsk tsk. Read the post. This is about revenge and betrayal, not about financial gain. I don't even need the stuff, but I'll be damned if I let it get fire saled, dumpstered or pocketed by security (the latter being the current fate of any hardware not in constant use).

      • There's no justification so stop trying to provide one - you're stealing, its wrong, and claiming its to support dependents, besides being bullshit, does not make it right.

      And attributing claims to me that I didn't make doesn't make it any more wrong. You don't need to do that, because I opened by saying that I know theft is wrong, but I'm in a position where I genuinely feel that I have no longer have moral or ethical impediment to carrying it out in this case.

      Now, given that we agree that theft is wrong, and that I'm a reprehensible weasel (should I actually go through with it, and neither of us knows whether I will), would you like to move on to debating how awful it is that someone should be put in the situation where they feel such anger that they put aside common morality, or shall we return to reading between the lines some more?

      --
      If you were blocking sigs, you wouldn't have to read this.
    9. Re:Advocating theft is "interesting"??? by aka-ed · · Score: 1

      yeah a crime is a crime (thats a circularity).

      "legality"=!"morality"

      --
      I survived the Dick Cheney Presidency 7 to 9 AM 7-21-07
    10. Re:Advocating theft is "interesting"??? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      circularity, gee, someone took philosophy 101. and by the way, theft is also immoral.

    11. Re:Advocating theft is "interesting"??? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Damn, you're good!

    12. Re:Advocating theft is "interesting"??? by aka-ed · · Score: 1

      What is theft, however?

      --
      I survived the Dick Cheney Presidency 7 to 9 AM 7-21-07
  72. Not paying during bankruptcy not :"illegal" by Joe+Decker · · Score: 1
    Wages are apparently usually treated as claims that would be paid earlier out of whatever assets are left in the company, but that doesn't actually mean you have to get paid if there's no assets whatsoever.

    Here's a reference.

    Warning: IANAL.

    1. Re:Not paying during bankruptcy not :"illegal" by Baron+of+Greymatter · · Score: 2, Informative

      If the company is in Chapter 11 (still operating but being reorganized) employees must still be paid if they are working, but if we're talking about Chapter 7 (liquidation) then the employees are probably SOL.

      Employees are usually considered unsecured creditors as far as the US Bankruptcy Code is concerened. They get paid with whatever money is left after secured creditors (banks, suppliers, CEO's Golden Parachute, etc.) are paid. Holding company assets as "hostage" will just get a person thrown in jail for theft.

      I've known several people who were never paid their final check after being canned when their company filed Chapter 7. They had no recourse whatsoever as it wasn't enough to sue the company over (which they couldn't do anyway while the company was in bankruptcy court). All they could do is file a claim with the court and pray.

      This was in Arizona, which has few labor laws of its own (it is a right-to-work state that follows federal laws only reluctantly due to our anti-Federal-gummint attitude here). Other states may be different so you have to check your own laws.

      IANAL either.

      --
      Microsoft's VP of Customer Service is Helen Waite. If you are having problems with their products go to Helen Waite.
  73. You are an immoral cunt of the highest order by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    The next time your apartment is robbed, I just want you to remember that the guy who did it was "oppressed" just like you, you spoiled fuck.

    Lets see if you can draw up the same sympathy for him as you expect for all the "oppressed geeks" who don't have the wits to figure out that they can get up and leave their job any goddam moment they feel they are getting a raw deal.

    1. Re:You are an immoral cunt of the highest order by Rogerborg · · Score: 1, Troll
      • The next time your apartment is robbed, I just want you to remember that the guy who did it was "oppressed" just like you, you spoiled fuck

      Where's the analogy? Unless I was robbed by someone that I knew, that I'd lied to, cheated, treated like shit, and already stolen from, you have no argument. And why are you "quoting" words that I didn't use? I don't feel sorry for myself, I'm way better off than 99% of the world's population, and my god I know it. I don't need to loot my office, but I'm going to do it anyway because I'm feeling betrayed and angry. It's affirmitive action.

      • don't have the wits to figure out that they can get up and leave their job any goddam moment they feel they are getting a raw deal

      I'd love to still be that angry. Do you have a mortage? Dependents? A pension plan? Health insurance? A basic grasp of what some sectors of the tech market are like right now?

      And something else. I refuse to assume that all employers are lying, cheating, thieving bastards. When they say that they value their employees, that they want a relationship based on trust, I actually believe it. I'd hate to be so cynical that I didn't. And so when I get screwed, it hurts. I feel betrayed. This is quite apart from broken contractual promises.

      So don't tell me to toughen up and keep changing jobs. Or do it with the knowledge that replacing a skilled techie costs a company in the region of $50,000 (my employer's own figures). So by changing jobs every time that I'm not happy, I'd cost them money anyway. Did that occur to you?

      --
      If you were blocking sigs, you wouldn't have to read this.
    2. Re:You are an immoral cunt of the highest order by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      I'd love to still be that angry. Do you have a mortage?

      Ever hear of mortgage insurance?

      And don't tell me these people are stealing laptops to support granny in the nursing home, thats a load of shit and you know it. This is about greedy spoiled fucks just prying off things that aren't nailed down because they think they can get away with it.

  74. Because you have free will. by Ars-Fartsica · · Score: 1, Troll
    I don't recall anyone holding a gun to your head forcing you to work at one office instead of another. You made a choice to go and work at a company, and when you steal from it, you are stealing from the funds that will eventually go to pay ALL former employees, so you are also stealing from the receptionist who is trying to support two kids on a third of your pay.

    I cannot believe the horseshit I am seeing posted on this topic. You spoiled fucks have got yourself so convinced that there is some "PHB" conspiracy to oppress geeks that you now are writing yourselves a blank check to commit theft because you think Monty Burns is out to get you.

    Just remember this when you go to start your own business, and the "geeks" who spend 90% of their time playing Doom start taking home the laptops because you are oppressing them.

  75. Self-compensation by 1millionmhz · · Score: 2

    Another issue here is that the employees who are left when a company comes to its bitter end are generally viewed as the "most valuable," having made it through many many rounds of layoffs. So the first batch of layoffs, people considered to be below par, get substantial severence, rewarded for sucking. Subsequent rounds of layoffs have smaller and smaller severence packages. Those who are still around at the bitter end commonly receive nothing for enduring the vast majority of the misery that the company has wrought. How can anyone fault them for taking part in a bit of "self-compensation"?

  76. You could have left at any time by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    So like sheep you all stayed on when you realized the project was doomed. You are intelligent but you have no common sense. There will always be positions for losers like you in our economy, thankfully, even in the tech industry.

  77. You're preaching to swine, don't bother by Ars-Fartsica · · Score: 2
    Looking at the other comments to your post, its obvious that even the simplest moral foundations of our society have eluded most of the other posters.

    Oh, by the way, these are the same people who want increased privacy. Go figure.

    1. Re:You're preaching to swine, don't bother by Fat+Casper · · Score: 2
      If my employer deliberately behaves outside the law towards me, what obligation do I have to behave within the law to the company? My moral foundations would tell me to make my actions proportional. I won't burn the CEO's house down, but I will even the scales as well as I can.

      Never let "the law" overturn reason. I don't do a lot of things, not because they're illegal, but because they're wrong. That's morals, for any swine without any of their own.

      --
      I spent a year in Iraq looking for WMD and all I found was this lousy sig.
    2. Re:You're preaching to swine, don't bother by Ars-Fartsica · · Score: 2
      If my employer deliberately behaves outside the law towards me, what obligation do I have to behave within the law to the company?

      Well, if you go after them in a court of law you at least won't risk getting a criminal record yourself. This would strike me as common sense...aren't people here afraid of getting caught? You could ruin your chances of ever getting another decent job.

    3. Re:You're preaching to swine, don't bother by Fat+Casper · · Score: 2
      You call these people (and me, too, I suppose) swine because you don't like our morals, but the best argument you can come up with is "I hope you know that this will go down on your permenent record?" People taking responsibility for themselves isn't a bad thing.

      --
      I spent a year in Iraq looking for WMD and all I found was this lousy sig.
    4. Re:You're preaching to swine, don't bother by Ars-Fartsica · · Score: 2
      People taking responsibility for themselves isn't a bad thing.

      I know people who have are techies and have records - they cannot find gainful employment and have been reduced to day laboring and odd jobs.

      Besides the fact that it will ruin your life, theft is just wrong. Isn't your dignity worth more than a laptop?

    5. Re:You're preaching to swine, don't bother by hearingaid · · Score: 2
      aren't people here afraid of getting caught? You could ruin your chances of ever getting another decent job.

      The impression I'm getting is that for most people, the answer is no; they do not have decent jobs. ;)

      Just because you're getting paid doesn't make it a good job. 80 hours is undesirable.

      --

      my old sig used to be funny, but then slashcode ate it and now it's not funny anymore

  78. Evidently it is warranted by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Judging from the posts so far, it sounds like most people think anything that isn't nailed down belongs to them, so obviously the security is warranted.

  79. From a 'smaller' point of view... by mindslip · · Score: 3, Interesting

    I run a one-man-show which is incorporated for my protection, and of course, tax purposes.

    The articles of incorporation (Canadian law, BTW) clearly state that in the event of a bankruptcy, or similar, all money oweing to directors of the company (me), will be paid in full before other debitors.

    So, technically, if I declare bankruptcy, I could state that the company owes me $xxx,xxx.xx and hand over the company assets to myself personally, leaving nothing for the debitors.

    IANAL, but I think I've got a good one! =-)

    Does anyone use something similar, and has anyone had any personal experience putting similar rules into force? I'd really love to know what sort of a leg I have to stand on. Stuff in writing is only worth the paper it's printed on until you test it!

    mindslip

  80. parallax by neoThoth · · Score: 1

    The ironic part is from another social construct "apartment living" the rules are pretty simple. If, as a tenant in my complex, I stop paying them and suddenly become evicted the apartment complex is legally allowed to hold my possesions and sell them to recover damages.

    My room mate is still owed over $8000.00 from his last employer. At the very least he should have been allowed to keep the laptop (that unfortunately his company leased) to help compensate. They offered him another deal with X amount of extra cash etc. But what kind of offer is that? They are promising to deliver money to me after failing to meet the exact same promise (of money delivery) for the last 5 weeks. At the very best case scenario here my room mate should be able to write off the lost compensation from his taxes, but who has time to study all that CPA bullshit?

    ne0

  81. Stealing by any other name by Hoi+Polloi · · Score: 1

    It is just theft, plain and simple, Robin Hood fantasies not withstanding. Employers not paying employees for their time is also theft however and when assets go on the chopping block they should be legally entitled to first dibs on any funds raised. Investors can get what is left. Maybe CEOs and owners of companies that fail to pay employees should be held personally liable also instead of being able to hide behind a corporation?

    --
    It is by the juice of the coffee bean that thoughts acquire speed, the teeth acquire stains. The stains become a warning
  82. Your kidding right? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    100+ hours a week every week. Who take a job like that. Hello there is only 168 hours in a week. That leaves 9 hours a day for eating and sleeping. I could see this every other week maybe, but you'd have to be stupid, or insane to subject yourself to that every week.

    1. Re:Your kidding right? by Paradox+!-) · · Score: 1

      So I guess you don't know any Med students?

      They're ALL Stupid or Insane...well, not stupid, but DEFINITELY Insane.

    2. Re:Your kidding right? by Lurkingrue · · Score: 1

      **ahem**

      I am a med student.

    3. Re:Your kidding right? by Paradox+!-) · · Score: 1

      And you still take the time to read and post to /.

      QED.

      ;-)

  83. priceless by tie_guy_matt · · Score: 1

    Laptop that you "forgot" to return $900
    Server that you stuffed into your trench coat $3000
    Knowing that you screwed over the VC....

    Priceless!

  84. Why not... by errxn · · Score: 1

    ...just gut the machines? It'll take 'em so much longer to figure it out. A hard drive here, some RAM there...hmm...come to think of it, this machine is pretty loaded....

    --
    In Soviet Russia, Chuck Norris will still kick your ass.
  85. Aaaah, I seee! by Pig+Hogger · · Score: 2

    That's why the US economy is so "strong": they cheat their employees...

  86. "Associates." by saintlupus · · Score: 2

    They have a policy not to call their employee's employees, but associates. Like that really means they have any say in the company.

    Yeah, the supermarket by my apartment has the same policy. Similarly, I don't see too many acne-ridden 16 year old cart jockeys making boardroom decisions.

    In a similar vein, my father is essentially a foreman in a rather blue-collar line of work. But they keep changing his job title to shit like "coach" and "team leader" so that everyone will automatically assume that the manager to employee barrier is gone.

    Reminds me of when Mao started calling all the farmers "workers."

    But I'm rambling.

    --saint

    1. Re:"Associates." by dumb+kid · · Score: 1
      Yes, I to worked for a company that decided that everyone would be called "associates". When this was announced, one of the people present asked, "Will it now say 'Associate' on all of our business cards?" Of course, the response was "no".

      At the next company meeting, when the name tags were handed out (250 people, most of whom saw each other every day and they thought we needed name tags??), they all had the word "Associate" underneath the names. I taped my business card over the nametag, complete with my job title of "Senior Systems Engineer". When the presisident of the company saw this, he asked about it. I told him that I was proud to be an engineer, and that an associate was someone who sprayedperfume on you in the department store. Severe CLM.

      --
      - Never attribute to malice that which can adequately be explained by stupidity.
  87. bankrupt is the best description of its own laws by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative
    Picture this:

    Your company and its inferious selection of goods and services is soon to go under. You and your executive suit buddies are sad but apathetic in a way. After all, since you are executives, you have ALWAYS seen great profit and income, through whatever ups and downs that caused multi-hundred to thousand layoffs, increase in prices, reduction in quality, etc. In fact (if you are an IT firm) you probably already layed off most of the engineers and techs, while keeping the army of bureaucrats and other suits (each with their staffs) on overhead. Now that the time has come for the company to disolve you now are worried about how big and nice your severance packages will be. Screw many of the employees that have worked for 10 years or more and wont be getting the money due them (salary) at the very least not in a timely manner, forget the workers that will loose their retirement and 401k's, slap down any workers that gave their all, and will now be left in the dirt. Who cares about them? You are the 'Mighty Executive' (TM). Your ability to do nothing productive at all except absorb money and resources, while actually preventing inovation and progress has only been exceeded by your salary, stock options and fringe benefits.

    Your stock options will be liquidated and added to your cush severance package soon, so who worries? But can't you do more? Sure you can! How about you buy cars, furniture, maybe real estate, computers, travel, etc in a mad shopping spree frenzy for you and your executive suit buddies, so that when the final date set by the court comes, you will NEVER be bothered about paying that back. Screw the fact that if you already are in the process of going down, that you shoulD NEVER have been allowed to purchase more. Screw the fact that your lenders and providers just have to suck it up. So what if your 'company' will never see the light of day again... you can just get together with your suit buddies later and have a different name. Thanks to the fact that individuals are held responsible for their debts, but not decision making individuals in the company (your suit buddies) you are a happy and toy loaded individual. Hell, now to think about it, it is GREAT that your company went under!

    These things happen btw. They happen ALL THE TIME. And it is not a 'evil corporate' thing, rather it is a 'corrupt and traitrously inconsistent government and its policies' thing. I know of way to many ethical people who's businesses have been shut down simply because they expected payment to be received for services rendered.

    Like with car accidents caused by some swerving wreckless uninsured scumbag. You and your insurance has to foot the bill, simply because he/she 'couldn't afford to pay'. That happens, I understand that very well, but what about the fact that they still are allowed to drive? What about putting them to work to pay it off? Screw me, the victim. I am unimportant. Me and my concerned for all, (not just me), good driving self are irrellevant compared to Mr. You owe me, idiot swerving no signaling driver.

  88. A story by Adam+Jenkins · · Score: 1

    There was this coffeeshop where the owner was really bad at paying the employees on time. So the employees started taking their wages out of the register, and leave a note about how much they took. The employer hadn't been paying them on time because she was having troubles juggling paying the rent and installments on the new advertising campaign to promote the store. Once she realised what thieving devious little smart arses she'd hired, she wondered how much else they'd pinched. She sacked them and hired some honest people instead. They treated her with respect, and she replied in kind, giving them all a nice payrise once the new advertising campaign kicked in and the store became more popular. The moral of the story: don't steal. If you have a problem with an employer, tell them.

    1. Re:A story by denshi · · Score: 2
      It's always nice to spin fantasy out of moonbeams to trump someone's factual arguments, isn't it?

      Lay off the hooch next time you post.

    2. Re:A story by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you can't afford to both advertise and pay your employees on time, guess which one you ought to choose? If you say advertising, remind me never to work for you,

      And how could you call employees that *wrote down* how much they took of the money they were *owed* "dishonest"?

    3. Re:A story by Adam+Jenkins · · Score: 2

      I know of companies where employees have gone without pay or with lesser pay for months because they would rather have somewhere to keep working and they like working there, than chuck a hissy fit about their pay being late once or twice. And yes I would call people who take money without being told to "dishonest". What's with slashdot lately, it's like everyone is trying to be geekier than thou..?? Is there some secret conspiracy going on? We must all boycott any companies who are so evil as to try and provide for customers or stay in business, and replace them with a bunch of antisocial know-alls who refuse to do anything? Homey, PLEASE.

  89. sue a criminal enterprises by Barbarian · · Score: 2

    Okay, how do you sue a criminal enterprise in court? They're either going to lie, cheat, or bribe their way out of it. Companies that work employees like dogs for their last month, and never pay them, are criminal organizations.

  90. 5 finger discount by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It is stealing. Plain and Simple. See the morals that Slick Willie taught America by taking the furniture from the Whitehouse!

  91. I have NEVER worked 80 hours.... by xtremex · · Score: 2, Informative

    I've been in this field for some 10 odd years, and never in mylife have I worked 80 hours. (Sometimes by choice, at home, but never "on the clock")
    You have to lay out the rules in the begining.
    I am now a director of technology, and I am Task oriented. If you have a specific task to do, and you're done for the day, go home! Why sit there and use the company's bandwidth? I don't believe in the "asses and elbows" method. At my company, we are ALL professionals, we all know what we have to do. Our Cisco guy only comes in when he has specific tasks to do when his physical presence is required. The rest of the time he's at home working remotely. Why have him sit in his cubicle for 8 hours? It never made sense to me. He's paid for his knowledge and technical expertise and for ALWAYS saving our ass. Some of our programmers prefer to work at the office. They say home has too many distractions. That's fine. I say "Only you know how you work best". I never care how a task is done. You can go home and pay your COUSIN to do the work. As long as I get the final product..I'm happy. Isn't that what it's all about? Results? That's why I have the best team. Everyone's happy. Sick days and personal days are just "symbols". There is no set schedule. 85% of our programmers work at 4 AM. Why make them bend to the 8:30-5:30 way of life when they are not as productive? As long as MY superiors see the results they want, they couldn't care less. EVERY company should work this way. You'll have happy, more productive professionals. Not burned out card punchers.

    --
    If you're not a Liberal in your 20's, then you have no heart.If you're still a Liberal in your 30's you have no brain.
  92. Bouncin In Silicon Valley by t0qer · · Score: 1

    I bounced from 4 jobs last year, it was a very turmultious time for me and the wife.

    Job#1 Company imploded when the CEO moved the office from sunnyvale to alameda. What was a 10-15 minute commute turned into a 1.5 hour commute down the 880 hellhole. Then he bought his concubine a condo on alameda island. My last month there was spent secretly reading his inbox, as well as the beancounters quickbooks. Turned out he hired a mole to spy on us, make sure that nobody was onto his scams. After seeing the shape the company was in, I warned a couple of people of the impending implosion. I bailed out when they started telling me they wanted me on hourly. I got out of there with a celeron computer, a box of cat5, few other little odds and ends. Company did implode and everyone got pink slips.

    Job#2 Things went well for about 5 months, then I started noticing my boss giving me death march assignments, making more demands on me. I put my resume out there and was offered a job for 30k more than I was making. I got out of there with 2 atx cases, a couple of 10k RPM LVD drives, about 384megs of sims and dims.

    Job#3 These people were cool. About my second month into the job we all talked (my boss and CIO) I told them flat out don't B.S. me just give it to me straight and they did. They let me work until I found a new job, making 4k more than before. I decided not to do anything because they were actully decent to me and I respected that.

    Job#4 Things seemed great at first, but quickly declined from there. I started noticing incoming netbios connections on my computer. I quickly defined some win2k rules to stop anyone but me from making connections. When I asked my boss why the company was going through my computer (usually a sign that they are looking for something to fire you for) he told me i was being paranoid and to forget about it. 2 weeks later I was handed a pink slip. I knew it was coming so I got out of there with 2 thinkpads, a monitor, a bunch of NT CAL's and some original win2k server media.

    Now I did something smart with all this stuff, rather than leaving myself open to scrutiny from the local law enforcement agency, I donated all of this stuff to freinds who are dirt poor. In turn it has changed their lives for the better. When I say dirt poor I mean they are living in the ghetto's of silicon valley. So yeah, these former employers can bitch all they want, but they'll never find there equipment at my house mwahaahahaha.

    Now there is an old Italian proverb that goes well here, dead men dont talk. In dot com terms, dead companies dont talk either.

    --toq

  93. Re:WTF? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I am a layser [lawy-ser] - a successor to the imfamous Lawy Ser. Lawy was the imfamous carinval manager that travelled Europe in the late 19:th centuary.

    Now, however, most of us are trying to make it big in the entertainment buissness.

    And you are right, not may of us has been been in any box buster movies. Currently only Randy and Georges have and some success. (Most of us won't count the mini series, "Rois maudits", that George Ser stared in a success)

    I think Randy is moust famous for his apperance in Mighty Ducks (1992), and to some extent Casual Sex (1988).

    Georges, on the other hand, is only known, to some extent, in France. (Movies such as États d'âme (1986) and On a volé Charlie Spencer! (1986))

    Have a good day

  94. Been there Done that by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    During my time at one small ISP, I had occasion to find my payroll check bouncing at my bank.

    Needless to say this caused me some problems as checks of mine then bounced and then I had to deal with all that nonsense.

    When I told my boss what had happened, he was rightfully apologietic and wrote me a new check that day. That check cleared and I figured it was just a minor bookkeeping snafu.

    However, a few weeks later it happened again, and then again. No longer a minor inconvience, instead due to the incomptance of my superiours, my credit raiting had been affected.

    I learned my lession and went directly to my COs bank on payday to cash my check. Only once was I told that there was NSF, but it at least saved me from writing bad checks of my own.

    Needless to say my relationship with this CO had deteriated to the point that I turned in my notice. (While the bad checks were an issue, that was not the only one that this CO had. The managment in general was poor and turnover of key employees was high.) During my final 2 weeks I managed to liberate, among other things:

    a 10mb Switch
    some RAM
    a few HDs
    a Monitor

    If you want to call what I did wrong, fine. I don't think it was very "right" either. However, at the time I was pretty POed with them for the way they had treated someone who had worked 80 hour weeks for them with a very low pay rate. If I had to do it over again, you can bet I'd do the same damn thing.

  95. I can't confirm.. by mindstrm · · Score: 2

    But I believe that employee wages are at the top of the list in Canada. The very first debt that must be paid down is employee wages. THEN secured creditors, etc....

    1. Re:I can't confirm.. by hearingaid · · Score: 2

      it's more complicated than that, from what I remember from bankruptcy. (taking it in school, not experiencing it personally. :)

      although I do remember that secured comes first. but yeah, employees are pretty high. kinda. you have to remember that there's a bankruptcy trustee, and the employees are owed $3 million, and some bank has an unsecured loan for $10 million, guess who has more sway with the trustee.

      Also: I thought that in the U.S. there was a separate bankruptcy regime in each state? in canada, it's federal...

      one rule though: shareholders are always last. there's a reason they're called entrepreneurs.

      --

      my old sig used to be funny, but then slashcode ate it and now it's not funny anymore

  96. The Oregon System by jeff.paulsen · · Score: 2

    In Oregon, the Department of Labor will give you up to $2000 of wages owed (and take taxes out of it), and then go after the company for you. I was owed rather more than that, but that's all I got -- I may have signed away the rest to the Dept of Labor to cover their recovery costs. It came in very, very handy.

    All 12 of us who were owed money went down to the Dept of Labor together, and they gave us lots of perks and priority because we were all together: a conference room to do our paperwork in, our own caseworker, etc. It was terribly efficient; you should try it.

    --
    -- Jeff Paulsen
  97. Re:I'm With Trollificus by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If you insist, his UID is Raging Idiot.

  98. Our execs legalized their thefts by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    When my dot com went under the whole executive team awarded themselves computers for the fine job they did spending the company into oblivion. They said it was because they didn't have severance packages customarily given to management teams. Of course, this perk didn't extend to the people actually doing the work.

    I later found out that our CEO recieved a $500k severance payment for less than a year's work. Needless to say, some of my equipment didn't quite make it back.

  99. Sounds like the Napster argument by rirugrat · · Score: 1
    It seems like the laid-off employees are using the same reasons for theft as many of us /.ers were a year ago when downloading GIGABYTES of music from Napster.

    1) We know it's wrong, but we do it anyways
    2) We hate the people deciding our fates (*sshole bosses and the RIAA)
    3) Because we hate the people deciding our fate, we feel vindicated by stealing
    4) It's so easy to do!!!

    rirugrat

    "How's your whole..........family?!" -Red Peters

  100. Bankruptcy on Slashdot? by bellings · · Score: 2

    On the other hand, the fact that it's illegal to stiff your employees out of wages due them, even in a bankruptcy, isn't mentioned in the article...

    I'm guessing the slashdot editors have been paying real careful attention to the bankruptcy laws recently.

    I wonder why?

    --
    Slashdot is jumping the shark. I'm just driving the boat.
  101. employee theft vs. employer theft by andymac · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Man, this topic is so chock-full of good targets, er, topics, I hardly know where to begin. So here's my ramble:

    My view as an employee:

    As an employee, I am expected to work X hours in exchange for X dollars. Even if I am on contract, or a full-time salaried employee, that is the contract to which I agree with my employer. When my employer doesn't pay for services rendered, for what ever reason, I am owed compensation.

    There are two cases of "employers not paying" that are relevant here:

    1. My employer had terminated me/terminated my position/laid me off/etc.
    2. My employer has no money.

    I make the distinction because one case can occur independently of the other. That is, "my employer has no money and can't pay me" can happen without "I've been terminated/laid off" happening, and the converse is true (when terminated or laid off, the employer may or may not be able to pay you what ever monies are owed to you).

    In the first case, you usually can, via legal action, get monies owed to you. In the second, the likelihood of seeing monies owed to you is slim to none. Why? because as an employee (unless you fall under special legislation such as WARN act, and such items), you are an unsecured creditor.

    Why does this matter? Because if your company cannot afford to pay you any monies they owe you, they most likely are also having difficulty paying thier other creditors. And if some of those other creditors are secured, that means "they get first kick at the can".

    Much of the hardware, software, furniture and other assets are bought with monies acquired by a loan (unless your VC is generous) or via leasing. Those financial arrangements that were made to acquire those assets are almost always secured. So your hardware loan for $300K is secured by the hardware itself. When the company has to pay other bills, aside from salaries, or has to pay up becuase of a default situation, those assets are the first thing to go... to the bank, to the landlord, and any other secured creditors. So even legal action on your part will not get you elevated to the stature of secured creditor, and you'll still be stuck at the end of the line up, waiting for your now-small amount of $ (think: cents paid out on the dollar owed). (I suppose that if a secured creditor and your former employer could prove you had company assets that were part of a security arrangement for financing, the financing company could come after you for those assets! Zoinks! Being sued by a bank? Imagine what that would do to your credit rating!) Because of these security arrangements, your employer will be loathe to actually give you any of these assets in exchange for monies owed to you - these assets already are earmarked for other secured creditors.

    So what does this mean in the context of this discussion? Does this change the fact that people who are pissed about being short-changed should stop stealing? You're likely not going to get all that's owed to you. Deal with it. Then decide what's important for you. Sometimes it's better to walk away from a couple of grand, avoid the hassle and headaches and move on.

    That being said, I am sympathetic to people to decide to "get creative" with their severance packages - some people cannot afford to throw away several thousand dollars.

    --
    "Content's a bitch."
    1. Re:employee theft vs. employer theft by andymac · · Score: 1

      An old saying came to mind after submitting this post:

      Fool me once, shame on you.

      Fool me twice, shame on me.


      --
      "Content's a bitch."
  102. Witholding wages is a CRIME. by sar-fu · · Score: 2, Informative

    This happened to me recently, I was owed several thousand dollars back pay and was in posession of company equipment.

    It seemed natural that I should just hold onto the equipment untill I got paid, or just sell it on eBay to recover lost income.

    But then I mentioned this to a labor layer and he pointed out that witholding wages in the state of New York is prosecuted as misdemeanor punishable by a fine of up to $20,000.00 with a possibility of jail time!

    You can also be awarded triple damages for witheld income.

    So I sent back the equipment as quickly as possible and called the New York state attourney general, they were more than happy to help me.

    for the New York AG check out:

    http://www.oag.state.ny.us/contact/addresses.htm l# hotline

    http://www.oag.state.ny.us/workplace/employer.ht ml

    New York City
    120 Broadway
    New York, New York 10271
    (212) 416-8000

    Don't forget, there are other options available if you are also shareholder

  103. Fuq right/wrong!!! My family is 1st by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Psychologists and others who specialize in aggression management say only a small fraction of employees fit a criminal stereotype. The rest are looking for a way to get back at their boss after a layoff, demotion or pay cut. To that extent, said John Byrnes of the Center for Aggression Management (CAM), ex-employees are exhibiting classic passive-aggressive behavior.
    -+-+-+-+-+-+-

    Less "passive-agressive" more "Family-Provide" In some cases i would think...

  104. No f-ing way! by tepp · · Score: 2

    "They may have difficulty blaming themselves when they get laid off, so they direct their anguish at the company."

    F- that! So it's my fault I've been laid off from two jobs this year?!? I'm an honest worker, I work 40 solid hours a week, or more. I'm faster, better, stronger than most programmers in the group. I write lean, mean, bug-free code, I learn whatever the f- embedded box or language or API you need to know, in less than a week. I don't take vacation ("stealing from the company"). I only call in sick if I'm on my god damned deathbed. And now it's my fault?!? No f-ing way!

    And as for the jackass who complained about us leaving some "cushy" job for a higher pay raise - I never had a stable job. I'm two years out of college, and the only jobs I've had are dot.bombs. And I wasn't making that much either - 65k, after two years, for knowing everything under the sun, getting MCSD certified, and learning C#. When you take into the account the time I have been unemployed - first two months in Feb-Mar, and now since August 1st, I actually don't make much at all.

    So f- you, Mr. big shot author. I do my best. I work hard. I learn more in a week than you did in College. And for that, I get kicked in the ass by not only the dot.bombs, but by writers who believe we're all sitting on a pile of riches.

    And I never stole anything either.

    ~Tepp

    --
    Tepp
  105. Re:exaggerated losses -- by david.johns · · Score: 1

    A sun workstation with built-in refrigerator?! I want one!

  106. Mod parent down to 3 by Mashiki · · Score: 1

    Theft if theft, unless it's done in a binding contract to gain lost wages in Liau of layoff.

    Or to make it simpiler, I get laid off when the company owes me $50+K, I will take all the equipment I can to guarentee that I will be paid, should I recive my owed monies, then I will return the equipment in the state I claimed it in.

    Should I not get paid, the company here by forfits that equipment to me, in payment for services rendered. End of story.

    When you start a job, whether you sign a contract or it's given verbaly, it's still a binding contract.

    --
    Obsure Fact
    --
    If you write a check on a cow, it's still a check.

    --
    Mashiki
    --

    --
    Om, nomnomnom...
    1. Re:Mod parent down to 3 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Good luck getting someone to accept it as payment.

    2. Re:Mod parent down to 3 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      should I recive my owed monies, then I will return the equipment in the state I claimed it in.

      Yes that would be a real fucking stroke of brilliance - returning stolen property to its owner - gee, do you think the police might be there waiting for you? You truly are a dumb shit.

    3. Re:Mod parent down to 3 by Mashiki · · Score: 1

      Your more then welcome to attempt to insult me, but I've been dealing with children like yourself for *along* time.

      It is legal plain and simple, and I'll explain why for your simple thinking, knuckle draging self.

      But if you want to try a diffrent route, you take something from the company you worked(lay'd off), in Liau of wages to be paid. You are doing the same as a creditor would, if he walked in and started collecting things. The company is INDEBTED to you for monies owed, you broke no laws.

      If you would like me to dumb it down some more for you, you work as a body man, doing body work on cars. You run this business yourself...so you are your own employee. Someone comes in with a crunched front quarter(fender), you say $3,000 for the work and they say okay. But they don't pay you at the appointed time when the work is compleate. So what is your LEGAL recourse? Hold the property until payment is recived, if it's not in I think 60days in ontario, then it becomes your property to do with what you want.

      Pretty simple isn't it? As your put it...you dumb shit.

      --
      Om, nomnomnom...
  107. In Construction... by Penguinoflight · · Score: 1

    In construction they allow you to place a lean on the product... (they don't pay you, you get to use the house till they do.) I'm sure there's something similar for other businesses.

    --
    "And we have seen and do testify that the Father sent the Son to be the Savior of the World"
    1 John 4:14
  108. But where to go? by Paradox+!-) · · Score: 1

    Part of the problem with the "just get out" philosophy is where are we supposed to go? Microsoft? AT&T?

  109. Don't work for free unless you own the company by Felinoid · · Score: 2

    I was offered a job by a friend to work at his new DotCom...
    I needed only move away from home and work for free for 6 months.
    I considered it and turnned my friend down.
    Six months later he seems to have gotten everything going all on his own. Horray for him.

    Now he did get me intrested in working for free for a dot com.. thats why I started my own..

    If I work for somebody I expect to get paid.

    Let me add if I were screwed out of a paycheck I would walk home with something slightly less valuable than my missing paycheck.. and quit..

    I will NEVER work for someone who employees blackmail.

    As for the employees of companys who pull that. Get together and do the same thing.. only do it RIGHT. A good business plan is more valuable than the hardware assets anyway..

    --
    I don't actually exist.
  110. Re:islam is undefeatable by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If you did actual research you'll probably find the fastest growing religion is a tiny one at current and growing rapidly.
    Islam is a very established religion having very little room for actual expantion.

    As for the defeatability of a religion. There are quite a few tactics to destorying a religion.

    One tactic is to set up a structure with a single person at the head.. say like a Pope or the head of the 700 Club.

    Annother tactic is to clame acts of blasphamy as edicts of god.. for example flying air craft into buildings in the name of Islam.

    Once the religion is hijacked in this way it ceases to be a religion and becomes more of a socal excuse for what ever extream morality you wish to place in the religion.

    Such as killing people with anything you don't have and/or don't understand.
    [The wealthy americans or pagans who heal with 'magic' (medication they probably don't know anything about byond 'it works')]

    And the long made short... this is off topic...
    So say we stold the topic ok? Just seems fitting some how...

  111. "Take Stuff From Work" by Jamie+Zawinski · · Score: 5, Funny

    In the immortal words of King Missle:

    Take stuff from work.
    It's the best way to feel better about your job.
    Never buy pens or pencils or paper.
    Take 'em from work.
    Rubber bands, paper clips, memo pads, folders -- take 'em from work.
    It's the best way to feel better about your low pay and appalling working conditions.
    Take an ashtray -- they got plenty.
    Take coat hangers.
    Take a, take a trash can.
    Why buy a file cabinet?
    Why buy a phone?
    Why buy a personal computer or word processor?
    Take 'em from work.
    I took a whole desk from the last place I worked.
    They never noticed, and it looks great in my apartment.
    Take an electric pencil sharpener.
    Take a case of white-out; you might need it one day.
    Take some from work.
    It's your duty as an oppressed worker to steal from your exploiters.
    It's gonna be an outstanding day.
    Take stuff from work.
    And goof off on the company time.
    I wrote this at work.
    They're paying me to write about stuff I steal from them.
    Life is good.
  112. Good riddance. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    What do you expect? There are people out there getting stiffed. I had a friend lose his job, and he walked off with a really pimp laptop. We almost went back for a few G3's they had sitting around.

    The fact is, he got screwed out of a lot of money, and rather than have to deliberate over how he gets it back, he took something. I think it's bullshit that creditors are favored over employees. If you're a creditor, you take a risk. You may get returns, or the company may bomb. Screw the creditors. You owe something to the people you hired.

  113. Hard work / No pay by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    My friend's company gave him a paycheck, but ordered him "not to cash them until next week" or else "be looking for a job".

    Ya know what? It's illegal guys! Too bad scum like this isn't routinely thrown in jail.

    And the poor sap who takes advantage of a $600 PC goes to jail in lieu of pay???? Where's the justice????

  114. Re:Death March Projects-Money bondage. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Wouldn't what the employer did be illegal?
    A type of contract exist between employee and employer, termination at eithers discrethon.
    I work so many hours for a given amount of money.
    If one can prove that one worked those hours then this case should be easy.

  115. Re:Bankrupt Companies-cash back. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It's cheaper to pay employees in "items", than in actual cash. Think of how much the items are actually worth.

  116. Don't forget the gov by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The lists here that point out the priority of claimants are good, but miss an important creditor -- the IRS. They get first crack. And if your employer hasn't been paying their taxes, really bad things happen. Ditto for 401(k) fees, if those don't get paid.

    The first rule is that the government always collects.

    After that, it's a good idea to check out those 401(k) things, as if the account holders don't get paid, they tend to take fees from the accounts. And that gets the government in again, as the tax status of the accounts gets muddled. And if this happens, the only thing you'll know for sure is that you probably won't be able to touch the funds for a year or more while the lawyers fight.

    As the one poster pointed out, in Colorado, a companies board members are PERSONALLY liable for employee wages for accrued vacation time. This gives employers a lot of incentive not to drive things too far into the ground before coming clean.

  117. Bankruptcy varies state to state. by orichter · · Score: 1

    I don't know where you get your information, but please post a link and a quote. I believe bankruptcy varies state to state:

    "Also, laws may vary since the state determines what you can keep, so even if you may keep your home in Florida, you may lose it in New York. "

    http://www.dollar4dollar.com/bankrupt/txbankt.ht m

    I believe there are also several aspects however which are federal, but your simple statement is just wrong.

  118. The law in Australia by hayden · · Score: 1

    My understanding of the law in Australia (IANAL) is that once the liquidators get called in then there is a set order of payment. Employees are second (after the liquidators and even that may change in the near future). This includes all benefits (sick leave, annual leave etc) not just owed wages.

    --
    Nerd: Derogatory term typically directed at anybody with a lower Slashdot ID than you.
  119. Nice one boss by MisterPo · · Score: 1

    Couple of years ago I was working for a group of companies in the UK. My manager had given me a generous amount to set up a network on a new site. Convincing him that it would be good of me to be able to work from home he allowed a complete set up to be purchased for my house.

    A laptop, a server (for testing and backup), laser printer, colour inkjet, scanner, ISDN (it was a few years back remember) and loads of other sutff.

    Eventually he was forced to leave the company. Anyways, a Big Cheese in the company decides to promote his nephew to run us, but he takes an instant dislike to me.

    So he sacks me (P45 whilst I am on holiday). Cant complain as I got all the gear as he was too dumb to check I had anything :)

    Po

  120. Point of No Recourse by muthabored · · Score: 1

    Here in WI, an employee who is owed money by a business going yellow-belly up has no option other than filing a lien on the employer- wages are not considered a secured debt. This happened to some of us even before the internet; my old chef has a $1500 check that he keeps as a grim reminder not to work in Wisconsin.

  121. nothing to add by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I have nothing to add to this discussion except that I would like to thank 3dfx for their generous donation to me of 3 PC's, countless video cards, boxes of cables, an eeprom programmer, some various networking equipment, 2 monitors, an old laptop, some other stuff I can't remember and a voodoo3 T-shirt.

    Life sucks and then Nvidia buys you.

  122. Re:Fire Extinguisher? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I had a friend who worked in a hotel and he once told me that they had a problem with vagrants stealing fire extinguishers. I guess they can be sold at a pawn shop for a few bucks each.

  123. Not exactly by Sagarian · · Score: 1

    Officers and Directors of the company can absolutely be sued for instigating criminal or civil crimes at their companies. For this reason companies take out "Directors' Insurance" which pays in the event someone is successful in going after a Director for whatever reason (covers legal fees etc.).

    As to the specifics of Directors' insurance I can't say, since IANAL... I just remember us having to buy it at my previous company.

    Otherwise, there would be nobody willing to take a Board of Directors' seat, especially at a large, public company.

  124. Re:Lawyer: a few followup comments by hawk · · Score: 2
    This still isn't legal advice. If you can't find the full disclaimer above, you're too damned stupid to understand it anyway . . .


    I'll clump a bunch of responses right here.


    [Completely irrelevant aside: if somebody claims to be a "lawyser",
    shouldn't they be dispensing "legsal advice" or maybe "legal advuice"
    or something like that?]


    yeah. but i'm not an accurate tsypsists, either :)


    > OK, so how high a standard do you need for "intent" here?


    For criminal purposes, it would be at the time the goods (labor) were acquired. It's going to be tough to make the criminal case, though; it is a very high standard. Also, when companies get *this* far down (that employees won't get paid in bankruptcy), the current shareholders typically get nothing in Chapter 11 save what the creditors are willing to pay them for future work.


    > It's not legal advice because


    And it isn't applied to a specific set of circumstances, but in general. It's possible to offer legal advice where I"m not admitted, it's just a crime :)


    > I bet that's why iXL kept 'mysteriously losing' the paychecks of ALL
    its contractors for at least four or five months in a row rather than
    actually saying that they weren't paying htem.

    Contractors don't fall under employment law; paying bills late is rarely a crime. The criminal case would be even harder than for employees.


    > What about just refusing to return borrowed equipment (such as a home
    use computer) until your salary was paid?


    This will vary from state to state. You might have a security interest in it (unlikely). More likely, a mechanics lien (the term is used for many types of services) might apply in some states. Civilly, the doctrine is setoff: they owe you a certain amount for labor, you owe them for conversion, and someone pays the difference. Criminally, unless you have an actual right to do so in your state, the unpaid wages would not be a defense (though you're unlikely to be prosecuted).


    I don't know where you get your information,


    The bankruptcy code and several years of practicing law in bankruptcy courts.



    but please post a link


    not likely; if I'm going hunting for legal authories, pay me first :)



    and a quote.


    You have one. I'm a bankruptcy attorney, among other things


    I believe bankruptcy varies state to state:
    "Also, laws may vary since the state determines what you can keep, so
    even if you may keep your home in Florida, you may lose it in New
    York. "
    http://www.dollar4dollar.com/bankrupt/txbankt.htm


    That is a reference to exemptions, the property the bankrupt keeps. The federal code has a list of exempt property, but debtors bay also use state law exemptions *by explicit permission of the federal code*. States may also opt out of the federal list by statute, again by permission of the federal code.


    >I believe there are also several aspects however which are federal,


    Everything except federally granted state options on exemption and the law governing the validity of underlying debts.


    but your simple statement is just wrong.


    No, it isn't--but yours is ignorant. You are taking an out of context quote and applying it in general. This is why it is so dangerous to rely on friends instead of lawyers for legal advice . . .


    hawk, esq.

  125. Re:Lawyer: A few followup comments, formatted by hawk · · Score: 2
    oops . . .


    This still isn't legal advice. If you can't find the full disclaimer above, you're too damned stupid to understand it anyway . . .


    I'll clump a bunch of responses right here.


    >[Completely irrelevant aside: if somebody claims to be a "lawyser",
    >shouldn't they be dispensing "legsal advice" or maybe "legal advuice"
    >or something like that?]


    yeah. but i'm not an accurate tsypsists, either :)


    >OK, so how high a standard do you need for "intent" here?


    For criminal purposes, it would be at the time the goods (labor) were acquired. It's going to be tough to make the criminal case, though; it is a very high standard. Also, when companies get *this* far down (that employees won't get paid in bankruptcy), the current shareholders typically get nothing in Chapter 11 save what the creditors are willing to pay them for future work.


    >It's not legal advice because


    And it isn't applied to a specific set of circumstances, but in general. It's possible to offer legal advice where I"m not admitted, it's just a crime :)


    >I bet that's why iXL kept 'mysteriously losing' the paychecks of ALL
    >its contractors for at least four or five months in a row rather
    than
    >actually saying that they weren't paying htem.


    Contractors don't fall under employment law; paying bills late is rarely a crime. The criminal case would be even harder than for employees.
    >What about just refusing to return borrowed equipment (such as a home
    >use computer) until your salary was paid?


    This will vary from state to state. You might have a security interest in it (unlikely). More likely, a mechanics lien (the term is used for many types of services) might apply in some states. Civilly, the doctrine is setoff: they owe you a certain amount for labor, you owe them for conversion, and someone pays the difference. Criminally, unless you have an actual right to do so in your state, the unpaid wages would not be a defense (though you're unlikely to be prosecuted).


    >I don't know where you get your information,


    The bankruptcy code and several years of practicing law in bankruptcy courts.


    >but please post a link


    not likely; if I'm going hunting for legal authories, pay me first :)


    >and a quote.



    You have one. I'm a bankruptcy attorney, among other things


    >I believe bankruptcy varies state to state:
    >"Also, laws may vary since the state determines what you can keep, so
    >even if you may keep your home in Florida, you may lose it in New
    >York. "
    >http://www.dollar4dollar.com/bankrupt/txbankt. htm


    That is a reference to exemptions, the property the bankrupt keeps. The federal code has a list of exempt property, but debtors bay also use state law exemptions *by explicit permission of the federal code*. States may also opt out of the federal list by statute, again by permission of the federal code.


    >I believe there are also several aspects however which are federal,


    Everything except federally granted state options on exemption and the law governing the validity of underlying debts.


    >but your simple statement is just wrong.



    No, it isn't--but yours is ignorant. You are taking an out of context
    quote and applying it in general. This is why it is so dangerous to
    rely on friends instead of lawyers for legal advice . . .


    hawk, esq.