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US IT Worker Files Hiring Lawsuit Against Infosys, Class Action Proposed

itwbennett writes "Brenda Koehler is a VMware-certified professional network engineer with a master's degree in information systems and 17 years of experience. You might think that would qualify her for a lead VMware/Windows administrator, but Indian outsourcing firm Infosys apparently didn't. And Koehler has filed a lawsuit against the company, alleging that Infosys ignored her qualifications and eventually hired a Bangladeshi worker to staff a position she was qualified for. Koehler and her lawyers are asking the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Wisconsin to allow a class-action lawsuit against Infosys, with 'thousands' of potential plaintiffs in the case, according to the lawsuit, filed Thursday."

55 of 684 comments (clear)

  1. H1 Visa applicants are less expensive by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    All to common of a problem. H1 Visa applicants are way cheeper than Americans. I was replaced a few years ago because they "could not find anyone in america that could do my job". No one asked if I would like to apply.

    1. Re: H1 Visa applicants are less expensive by fuzzybunny · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Senior IT manager here. It's not just in America.

      The problem is that most managers don't give a shit. They are under enormous cost pressure, and standing up for principles and employees costs time and energy, especially when you're being given a hard time by your upper management.

      Most of the time, they're not around for long enough to suffer the long-term consequences of creating a million monkey club.

      Even worse, usually it's based on false cost models - the same sort of crap that leads you to hire (more expensive) external people rather than salaried staff because they're "variable cost". Budgeting for external suppliers often does not include additional costs for facilities, travel, management overhead, training, etc., as well as the intangible aspects of a body shop simply providing you with the cheapest shittiest junior guy they can get away with - and then refusing to do anything but the work that's exactly laid out in the contract (and badly at that).

      I've run into this situation myself a number of times and it is morale-crushing.

      --
      Cole's Law: Thinly sliced cabbage
  2. Master's degree in information systems by linuxguy · · Score: 5, Interesting

    "Master's degree in information systems and 17 years of experience" does not tell us that she was more qualified than the Bangladeshi hired. I have interviewed too many people who look good on paper only.

    1. Re:Master's degree in information systems by AK+Marc · · Score: 5, Informative

      There is lots of discrimination in hiring. Much of it has been studied and documented. Other parts haven't gotten as much attention. She never claimed she was "more" qualified, just that when the position was available, she wasn't hired, and when the position was filled, it was filled with someone who can't take the role unless "no other qualified candidate could be found". Which implicitly states she wasn't qualified, and bears no comparison between her and the person hired. He couldn't be considered unless she was already rejected as "unqualified". Not "qualified, but undesirable".

      The rules for H1-B are well defined. Based on a glance, the facts seem to be on her side.

    2. Re:Master's degree in information systems by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Interesting

      I interviewed a candidate from InfoSys about a year ago. The resume looked pretty good. Probably because it was *my* resume. They changed some details but it was a sloppy find/replace job.

    3. Re:Master's degree in information systems by Charliemopps · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I once had a business owner tell me he wouldn't hire a man with long hair. I said "that's illegal!" he replied "So?" Being young and naive I called a lawyer... who laughed at me and told me I needed a better reason to be a minority, judges don't like long hairs either.

    4. Re:Master's degree in information systems by Billly+Gates · · Score: 5, Informative

      There is nothing illegal about not hiring someone with long hair.

      Many on this site feel entitled not to be filtered out but that is a fact of life. Hiring is highly risky.

      What is illegal is not hiring someone based on sex, gender, religion, disability, race, being gay (1/3 of the states have this), or any other reason based on a civil rights violation. Dressing and looking unprofessional does not go under any of these critera.

      Being a woman or American is not why she was not hired. From the looks of it she is over qualified and therefore expensive and would be a risk of her leaving if they made her an offer but I could be mistaken. Impossible to prove and sorry folks but being expensive is not protected and a valid reason to filter someone.

    5. Re:Master's degree in information systems by The+Cat · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I love me a fucking world where a Master's Degree and 17 years experience only gets you a rude gesture from the hiring manager.

      May this job market drown in it's own shit.

    6. Re:Master's degree in information systems by iCEBaLM · · Score: 4, Informative

      If she was "overqualified" then there's even more reason why the H1B shouldn't have gotten the job. In this case, it is illegal to "filter" her.

      The law is quite clear - you can't bring someone in on an H1B unless an already work legal qualified candidate cannot be found. If she's overqualified, she's still qualified. Expensive or not, it would be illegal to hire an H1B over her.

    7. Re:Master's degree in information systems by Immerman · · Score: 5, Informative

      This case has nothing to do with "must hire qualified person" as your slippery slope suggests, but instead with "can't hire someone on an H1B visa if a qualified American can be found". Basically H1Bs allow companies to import foreign labor if, and only if, qualified Americans aren't available. Full stop.

      If I am qualified and apply for the job you are no longer legally permitted to hire someone on an H1B visa. You can hire any *other* American, but not a foreigner here on a visa specifically tied to this job. The idea being that the visas exist to import talent, not just to reduce wages.

      --
      --- Most topics have many sides worth arguing, allow me to take one opposite you.
    8. Re:Master's degree in information systems by iCEBaLM · · Score: 4, Informative

      If we put everyone under this light then would a McDonalds have to hire anyone with a college degree? What about a retired CEO? The turnover would be disasterous and nothing could function.

      If they applied for entry positions that McDonald's was trying to bring in H1B workers to fill, yes, they would have to hire them first.

      The point is not that the company has to hire overqualified workers, the point is they have to hire ANY available qualified legal US worker BEFORE they can try to bring someone into the country with an H1B.

    9. Re:Master's degree in information systems by evilviper · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I love me a fucking world where a Master's Degree and 17 years experience only gets you a rude gesture from the hiring manager.

      Sorry, but I've worked with Junior Admins who had masters degrees, and several years (not quite 17) of experience, and I was underwhelmed by their abilities.

      A MS doesn't prove anything about your abilities. Several years of experience is more poignant, but a largely incompetent person looking for a low enough salary, and particularly filling junior-level roles, can stay employed for a long time. But that doesn't mean they are qualified for the Senior level positions.

      I don't believe there's any point in criticizing what little we know of her CV here, but I also don't believe we should act like moron recruiters and say "keyword + X years == AWESOME!"

      --
      Slashdot gets worse every day... Pipedot: News for nerds, without the corporate slant
    10. Re:Master's degree in information systems by quetwo · · Score: 4, Informative

      If you work with H1B's, you need to clearly define what your qualifications are for the job. 5 years of experience in X, Have done Y in the past, etc. They need to be listed in the job description. Anything outside the description can't be included in the determination if somebody is qualified or not as a justification for bringing in the H1B. If she met all the bullet-points that were on the job description, she would have been a candidate, and therefore would have been able to apply, and therefore ALL H1Bs are ineligible by law. It's pretty cut and dry.

  3. wrong choice by iggymanz · · Score: 5, Informative

    Infosys is notorious for abusing the visa system to bring in totally unqualified and clueless south asians to be billable load on the U.S. system. We're talking people that couldn't even make the helpdesk script-reading sytem you get when you call tech support.

    Homeland security and Justice department have an intricate investigation since 2012 ongoing on Infosys' fraud and abuse of visa system.

    1. Re:wrong choice by berashith · · Score: 4, Interesting

      I worked at a place that wanted to use a single recruiting firm, and asked us to try to hire positions through infosys. The candidates were consistently poor. Really, really poor. I met someone at a friend's house who had applied to my company for several open spots in the previous year. He was asking why he had never gotten a call back, and why we kept re-opening the reqs, or if the turnover was that high. When I saw his resume, it turned out to be exactly what we were looking for, and a price we were willing to pay. It turned out that Infosys was interested in trying to fill $80/hr spots with $30/hr talent, or worse. They were consistent, and I dont blame it on race, but on pure profits over good business. They lost our account.

    2. Re:wrong choice by rapiddescent · · Score: 4, Interesting

      I used to be a tech interviewer at a large UK technical consultancy in the 2000's and we frequently received CV's from Indian nationals that you could hold up to the light and see that the CV's were exactly the same and had exactly the same cut 'n paste text. This led to a pretty massive review of the recruitment process.

      We also discovered fake UK companies setup purely to "employ" young middle class Indian graduates so they could get their Visa and then jump over to a large UK firm. These firms were on their CV's with faked up job roles - it was a total abuse of the visa system.

  4. Re:Basis for discrimination by Eskarel · · Score: 5, Interesting

    The plaintiff doesn't have to do anything of the sort. The plaintiff doesn't even have to prove that she is more qualified than the person they ultimately hired, merely that she was qualified for the position. H1B and the like require you to hire locally if possible first.

  5. Re:theres a thing that rhymes with "ion" by sexconker · · Score: 5, Funny

    it starts with the letter u. what am i thinking about, IT douchebags?

    I can't think of any English word that meets those requirements.
    You're thinking about "union", but "union" doesn't rhyme with "ion".

    Just like a typical union worker, you've:

    1: Failed to get the basics right.
    2: Demanded far too much time, money, and attention for your output.
    3: Managed to act like an asshole in the brief interaction you've had with other people on the matter.

  6. Re:Basis for discrimination by Narcocide · · Score: 5, Interesting

    You might be surprised... see, if they're hiring H1B workers, it means they're implicitly claiming (under the laws that allow H1B work visas so you can hire foreigners in the first place) that NO SUITABLE TALENT could feasibly be found state-side. If it can be proven however that they regularly pass over US citizens for the sole reason that H1B workers are the more cost effective option, they're probably going to be facing heavy fines at the very least. Its quite possible they will be in a lot of trouble and the court case will precipitate the type of more heavy restrictions on granting of H1B visas in the first place.

  7. This is trouble by zoffdino · · Score: 4, Insightful

    While most will criticize her ego, I see the lawsuit has some merits from an immigration/hiring practice angle. The biggest source of H1-B visas are from outsourcing companies like InfoSys, who hires almost exclusively from India. She is alleging that they passed over the qualified American applicants (which she may be one), to claim that no one can fill the opening and get an H1-B instead. This also inadvertently causes a racial bias, which favors South Asians over any other ethnic groups. She may have an inflated sense of self-worth, but the lawsuit is noteworthy as it's (the first time???) I've heard an American worker stands against tech companies in their hiring practices. The are hardly attracting the best minds to the US. They are only getting them cheap. And it must be stopped.

    1. Re:This is trouble by Jah-Wren+Ryel · · Score: 5, Informative

      One important note about the H1B program that rarely gets any press is that while there is a legal requirement to hire qualified citizens before considering an H1B holder, there is zero money allocated to enforce that requirement.

      It only gets enforced in cases like this where someone who was blatantly passed over in favor of an H1B holder who pushes on their own to see it enforced. To the best of my incomplete knowledge there has been a total of 1 enforcement actions by the DoJ regarding this sort of rule breaking during the entire ~2 decades of H1B visas.

      --
      When information is power, privacy is freedom.
    2. Re:This is trouble by Trepidity · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Even for those of us who support expanding legal immigration, they are pretty terrible poster children. Infosys and the like give H1-Bs a bad name which then drags the legitimacy of the whole system down with them. More respectable tech companies like Google and Microsoft do have sporadic abuses, but for the most part they use the system much more like how it was intended to be used. It would be nice to find a way to tailor the system more towards them, cut the Infosyses out of the game, and then expand a cleaned up H1-B system.

      One approach could just be to put an absolute salary floor on H1-B positions. If you're willing to offer someone $120k, I have a lot more confidence that this is actually a job in demand that fills a critical gap in the U.S. economy, versus if you aren't willing to pay more than $60k for this supposedly impossible-to-fill position.

    3. Re:This is trouble by thaylin · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Personally I think any position that is to be sent to a H1B must be posted on a site like USA jobs, then after a certain period of time if no candidate shows up than they can send it over for the visa. All the resumes on the site should be searchable (redacted of identifying data) to ensure they are not cheating. This paid for byt he company wanting to get the visa.

      --
      When you cant win, ad hominem.
  8. Re:Basis for discrimination by nbauman · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I thought so too, but then I read the complaint. They claim harassment on basis of national origin.

    At one job, the Asian workers left messages for (non-Asian) American workers threatening them and their families if they made trouble, etc. The Asians weren't just working cheaper. They were harassing the Americans. It sounded like they really didn't understand American culture.

    There was also an element of anti-American discrimination.

    The complaint also argues that they got H-1B visas by certifying that there were no available American workers, when it wasn't true. They also certified that they would pay Asian workers the prevailing wage, when that wasn't true either.

  9. It's about time by msobkow · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I've contracted in the US a few times. I worked closely with the consulting companies I dealt with.

    And when it came time to search for more work, they let me in on some of the keywords to watch out for when perusing ads. Those keywords mean they're postings to meet the legal obligation of advertising for a position before bringing someone in on a work visa.

    There is no point applying for those jobs -- 99% of the time they already have an overseas candidate in mind and they're just filling in the blanks for the paperwork by posting the ad.

    And that was way back in the late 1980's. From what I can see of the situation, it has not changed. Most ads placed in newspapers and online nowadays seem to be to meet the paperwork requirements for bringing in cheap overseas labour.

    By the way, I was quite qualified for many of those jobs, and applied anyhow. I had a few interviews, but despite years as an Oracle performance tuner and DBA, it seemed that the cheap Indian offshore workers always got the jobs. Same old, same old.

    The US doesn't need H1-B programmers at this point in time -- there are too many unemployed people out there. It's all a scam to save money.

    --
    I do not fail; I succeed at finding out what does not work.
    1. Re:It's about time by dkleinsc · · Score: 5, Interesting

      It's all a scam to save money.

      Sort of. Hiring H1-B applicants is a pretty expensive process and definitely a pain in the butt. Granted, the workers don't get to see as much of the cost of hiring them, but there are a lot more middlemen involved who each take their cut.

      What's really going on is replacing "free labor" citizens with what amount to indentured workers who basically can't quit. It means that when you decide "The entire tech department will now work 85 hours a week", you don't have the exodus of employees that you will get from citizen workers who (rightfully IMHO) won't stand for that sort of thing.

      It's not just about money, it's also about control and convenience for management.

      --
      I am officially gone from /. Long live http://www.soylentnews.com/
    2. Re:It's about time by msobkow · · Score: 5, Informative

      Just to make sure you see the right article, I searched it myself. Here's one of the first ones that interviews the whistle blower who started the ball rolling on holding RBC to task for the issue: http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/british-columbia/story/2013/04/05/bc-rbc-foreign-workers.html

      --
      I do not fail; I succeed at finding out what does not work.
  10. Re:Basis for discrimination by AK+Marc · · Score: 4, Insightful

    You are right only if they made her an offer she refused by demanding more than market pay. They didn't make her an offer, so how do they know she wouldn't work for their desired fee? They don't. They rejected her without proper legal consideration. They broke the law.

  11. Re:Basis for discrimination by TWX · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The H1B wars... begun they have...

    --
    Do not look into laser with remaining eye.
  12. Re:Right choice by nbauman · · Score: 4, Informative

    Standing up for certain legal rights is a legally-protected quality in an employee, and employers can't retaliate against them for that.

    There were a lot of sex bias cases in which the employee didn't have enough evidence to prove the bias, but they did have enough evidence to prove retaliation, and they won the case.

    You can't discriminate against people who refuse to work below the minimum wage, for example.

    In addition, if they did preferentially hire Asians for some reason -- on the assumption that Asians were more deferential, for example -- that could be racial discrimination. If they found Infosys managers saying that clearly in emails, they'd win.

  13. Re:Right choice by AK+Marc · · Score: 4, Informative

    The article indicates they did not offer her a job at any price. Also, the H1-B laws require "market rates" not "below market rates so we can claim no local talent was suitable, despite 10,000 applicants that were qualified on paper)".

  14. Re:Basis for discrimination by TWX · · Score: 4, Insightful

    This isn't about being white or race in general, it's about domestic labor versus imported labor.

    They could have hired British H1B workers and it would be just as illegal.

    --
    Do not look into laser with remaining eye.
  15. Re:Basis for discrimination by WaywardGeek · · Score: 4, Interesting

    My company recently adopted a no H1-B visa policy because we're doing a bit of military work, or so I assume (they really don't tell me anything). We've had a rec open for a hot-shot algorithms geek since January, and trust me, the applicants are not beating a path to our door. This is a fantastic job for the right guy, and it kills me that we're having trouble finding someone to fill it.

    The last super-algorithms programmer we hired was from IIT Madras. He's amazing. Before that, we hired an equally amazing white guy right out of college with a BS degree. Good talent is hard to find right now, which is why I think this class action lawsuit is doomed. Maybe it could have gotten some traction in 2010.

    Shameless plug: if you're a super-geek, work well with others (so many of us don't), and live near RTP in NC, or Winston-Sallem, send me a resume.

    --
    Celebrate failure, and then learn from it - Nolan Bushnell
  16. Re:Basis for discrimination by MisterSquid · · Score: 5, Informative

    In the United States of Politically Correct America, it is very hard to prove reverse discrimination

    I know it's difficult for some to understand, but THERE IS NO SUCH THING AS "REVERSE" DISCRIMINATION. There is only discrimination, regardless if you are white, black, brown, male, female, or transgender.

    --
    blog
  17. Doesn't matter for this by Sycraft-fu · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The thing is you can't bring in an H1-B visa person just because you want them, or feel like they are a "better fit" or any of that. You can only do it if you cannot find a qualified US candidate (citizen, permanent resident, etc). If you get an applicant that is qualified and wants the job, you have to take them over getting someone on a visa. You can't argue that they are overqualified, because you have to take them if they are qualified.

    That's the whole deal with the H1-B visa program: It is supposed to be for jobs you can't fill locally, either because there is too much demand for that kind of worker, the skill set isn't around, whatever. You can't find a qualified candidate, so you get one on a visa.

  18. Re:Basis for discrimination by MightyMartian · · Score: 5, Funny

    Meesa most upset that my mooie mooie Gungan network engineering certification not gonna be good enough for a job in America. Meesa be thinking that I be back to working in Gungan call center taking orders for cheap shit coming soon.

    --
    The world's burning. Moped Jesus spotted on I50. Details at 11.
  19. Wipro and Infosys, undermining the US Economy by Virtucon · · Score: 4, Interesting

    It's great to see this kind of thing. I hope she wins, honestly. She's got an uphill battle ahead of her.

    What a lot of people don't realize is that Wipro and Infosys buy influence in this country, that's how they've been able to game the system and get away with it for a long time?

    Ultimately we need to restructure the H1-B system so that it allows companies to get the talent they need without all the middle-man broker approach and doesn't exploit workers from abroad and keep wages down and unemployment high in this country. We don't need to hire Kindergarten teachers on H1-B visas. http://www.myvisajobs.com/Visa-Sponsor/Fort-Worth-Independent/202267.htm
    Really? Fort Worth ISD? Come on you can't find a qualified US resident to teach?

    Also, the immigration reforms that seem largely stalled now have some things in it that are making H1-B mills a bit nervous, I say good!
    Even in their own country, Wipro, Infosys et al are viewed as "Selling Indians abroad." So it'll be great to see how this case evolves.

    http://articles.timesofindia.indiatimes.com/2013-04-23/outsourcing/38762361_1_h-1b-immigration-reform-indian-it

    Take a look at the comments.

    --
    Harrison's Postulate - "For every action there is an equal and opposite criticism"
  20. Top quality desis no longer apply for H1B ... by 140Mandak262Jamuna · · Score: 5, Interesting
    The quality of Indians applying for H1B positions from India has changed a lot in the last decade. The opportunities have expanded a lot in India, they get very good salary and they hire cooks and maids for a pittance over there. So most top quality engineers do not want to leave India. Real high quality ones from IITs and Regional Engineering Colleges (whatever they are called now) etc go into management and if at all they come to USA, it is to Wharton, Kelloggs and such brandname MBA programs. Some high quality engineers come to USA to do Masters and they are usually good. Also a big factor is USA has lost its charm in the eyes of most young women in India. They are used to having maids and cooks. They go, "what? do the dishes, cook the dinner, wash the clothes, and gasp, clean the bathrooms? Are you crazy I am not coming there". So they high quality applicant stream has dwindled. I have not seen an IIT resume cross my desk in the last 10 years.

    On the other hand there are plenty of second, some third or even fourth grade engineers still enchanted by USA. They still apply and they are the ones most slashdotters disdainfully make fun of as poor quality desi programmers.

    I would not go back, no matter what pay they offer and how many cooks, drivers and maids I could afford over there. Once you get used to the clean water and clean air, and reliable electric grid, it is difficult to readjust. But next generation of me are not coming here. Sadly. It would benefit both USA and them. And those who are still willing to come damage USA and damage the reputation of all Indians, all for a fistful of dollars.

    --
    sed -e 's/Chuck Norris/Rajnikant/g' joke > fact
  21. Re:She would not be granted an Indian work visa by Darinbob · · Score: 4, Informative

    This lawsuit is about a job that is based in the US and so must follow US laws. The worker would not be relocating to India.

  22. Re:Basis for discrimination by hackula · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Pay 20% above the market rate and you will have no problem finding devs. Just saying..

  23. Re:Shocked!! ...not shocked by Darinbob · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Problem is, people have to do things like file lawsuits to change this, exactly what this story is about.

    It's difficult in general to be sure you were discriminated against in order to file a lawsuit. If you only hear about it you can't file the lawsuits yourself. If you're a customer of these firms you can't file lawsuits since you're not the one being discriminated against, the most you can do is stop doing business with them.

    And some people just don't want to cause problems. I was at a firm where one Indian QA woman applied for a job in the next building as her position was being cut, and the other group said she was qualified but because she didn't speak Vietnamese they couldn't give her the job. I told her to immediately go and complain to HR as this was an over the top violation of the law, but she said she didn't want to cause any problems for anyone.

  24. Re:Basis for discrimination by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

    doesn't have to be 20%..10% with a better work environment can make quite a difference.
    What is a better work environment ?
    Flex time, comfortable clothing, not stuffing people in a 6x6 cube.

  25. Re:Basis for discrimination by murdocj · · Score: 4, Informative

    Nonsense. I've met some brilliant people and most of them have been quite socially adept. You don't have to put up with crappy behavior to get a great developer. Doesn't mean they are going to wear a 3 piece suit, but you can get an actual, reasonable human being that does great work.

  26. Age discrimination too. by Maxo-Texas · · Score: 4, Interesting

    One thing I noted in working with Infosys is that they require your high school graduation date.

    Not evidence you graduated.

    Not the year you graduated from college.

    I'm sure they think they are being cute, but I hope that they get burned hard for it someday.

    --
    She was like chocolate when she drank... semi-sweet at first and then increasingly bitter.
  27. How dare she sue! by plopez · · Score: 4, Interesting

    But not to worry the conservative SCOTUS in conjuction with tort reform and a proper realignment of labor laws will soon put an end to that. We can't have individuals oppressing corporations because, after all, corporations are people. If workers want to be treated as people they shouldn't be workers. They should choose to be wealthy.

    --
    putting the 'B' in LGBTQ+
  28. Re:Basis for discrimination by Austerity+Empowers · · Score: 4, Interesting

    The beauty is that we do all the work for them just by being our usual elitist snobby selves. I'm not sure how many people have been sent packing just because they don't know some piece of jargon or aren't familiar with the latest trends in some relatively ephemeral technological zeitgeist, in the hopes that Candidate will immediately become useful within the first week of employment.

    Being a "VMWare/Windows Administrator" strikes me as relatively irrelevant compared to MS IT + 17 years, which should be enough to suggest that this person is competent in her field, and can learn to administrate just about anything, if she's motivated. But I'm sure if she doesn't know in the interview how to optimally configure a redundant VMware server, she's hopelessly lost... I mean that's like rocket science right there. Or something. We're not hiring people, we're hiring wikipedia pages, and due to all the jargon and groupthink, mostly vandalized wikipedia pages.

    I'm not sure how this person plans to prove discrimination, I have no doubt (having been on interviews designed to hire H1Bs), that she was thrown into a ringer designed to make her look inferior to someone who got the questions ahead of time, and did the research ahead of time. The irony is that I've survived these interviews, fielding questions from database design to maxwell's equations applied to PCB designs, but the ultimate trump card is suddenly the job you're interviewing for is suddenly a more junior position, and suddenly the pay is less than what the job description might IMPLY (no salaries/grades given!). Then of course you say no and they hire the H1B anyway, because the qualified American wasn't interested. There's no winning. These people SHOULD be sued, I just lack the faith that they'll get what they deserve.

  29. Re:Basis for discrimination by nbauman · · Score: 5, Informative

    It's in the court documents, which are linked from TFA. http://www.pbclaw.com/2013/08/02/proposed-class-action-complaint-filed-against-infosys-for-failure-to-hire-national-origin-discrimination/

      D. Particular Instances of Discrimination

    69. Numerous instances of discriminatory intent have come to light.

    70. While working on the assignment at Vinings, Georgia in December 2008, Infosys employee-whistleblower Jay Palmer claims that another Infosys employee wrote “Americans cost $,” and “No Americans/Christians” on a whiteboard.

    71. Palmer claims that he received a couple of telephone calls in which the caller asked, “Why are you doing this, you stupid American, we have been good to you.” While Palmer does not know who made these calls, they came after he began to complain about Infosys’s misuse of the visa system.

    72. On February 28, 2011, while Palmer was working on a project in Alpharetta,Georgia, he claims that he found a typewritten note on his keyboard, and a Word document on his computer, both of which stated, “Just leave your [sic] not wanted here hope your journey brings you death stupid american.”

    73. On April 21, 2011, Palmer claims that he received an e-mail on his personal e-mail account stating, “if you make cause for us to sent [sic] back to india [sic] we will destroy you and your family.

    74. Palmer claims that he was called a stupid American on one occasion by two Infosys employees.

    75. Mr. Palmer brought these issues to the attention of Infosys, but Infosys did nottake significant steps to investigate or prevent future issues

    76. During Mr. Palmer’s lawsuit, another employee also testified that Americans generally were made to feel unwelcome at Infosys.

  30. H1 ? Write to order by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

    You won't get that job. The H1 Employer will write the ad so that only his potential hire can pass it. I need a person who speaks creole and yiddish, with a degree in fine arts and electrical engineering. Must be able to program in Fortran and java, in cantonese.

    When the Employer goes back to INS to prove the job they wrote the definition for cannot be filled except by the H1, the circle is closed.

    Oh, and you OWN the H1...you'll never get that with a normal employee.

    Attorney who used to write those ads.....

  31. Re:Basis for discrimination by claytongulick · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Frankly, you're either grossly uneducated, or a troll. Either way you're showing your ignorance.

    Just because you might know a little C or ASM does not give you the right to sneer at talented developers who chose different platforms. Go here and tell me these people aren't "real programmers": http://www.chromeexperiments.com/

    Guess what: I code in C and asm, I hand solder my own boards. I write cross platform drivers for Windows and Mac. I'm reasonably proficient in probably every language you've ever heard of, from Clipper to RPG (on the AS400) to Java and .Net and I've been doing it for about 17 years now professionally, longer as a hobby. And you know what? I choose to spend 90% of my current development time in Javascript, both in the browser and in NodeJS.

    Hopefully one day, if I work really hard and keep trying, maybe I can be considered a "programmer" in your book.

    --
    Drinking habits can be dangerous. You can choke on the cloth and the nuns will wonder where their clothes are.
  32. Re:Basis for discrimination by gaspar+ilom · · Score: 4, Interesting
    BTW, I don't think Infosys are the only ones who may do this. I recently did a phone screening for a *temporary* web-development job w/ Sapient. AFAICT, I gave detailed, accurate answers to nearly every technical question asked of me. And several of the questions were extremely remedial: ("What is the 'http' part of a URL called?" "Name some other protocols that a browser can use...") -- and worse: the interviewer tried correct me with his own, WRONG answers. Anyway, because of this thread, I did a little searching, and came across this WSJ article about Sapient:

    Sapient hired about 2,000 staff in India last year too. The Boston-based company has 65% of its total workforce of more than 10,100 based in India.

    "About 35% of our people are hired locally [in markets the company operates]," Mr. Endow said. "That's a very healthy mix."

    However: Sapient has only about 1,500 US employees, and at least one-third to one-half of those are here b/c of visa sponsorship. (Consider that an H1-B lasts for 3 years -- extendable up to 6 -- and 2013 isn't even over, yet.) So:

    1. Are companies like Sapient just going through the motions to make it *look* like they're trying to fill some position with a U.S. worker -- as some sort of legal workaround? -- when their actual goal is to import yet another H1-B, all along?
    2. Does any U.S. government agency keep an accurate, publicly-accessible record of all accepted/denied H1B requests? ...including the name of the company, with the date, location, and public-job posting for the position they were allegedly trying to fill?
  33. Re:Basis for discrimination by Opportunist · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Not just you. Our management quickly found out that techs are actually more interested in some "work perks" than money. And I guess it pays off. We have pretty much everything the GP asks for (and a few more job perks like free lunches (provided you're here at noon, which isn't really a given considering our VERY flexible time schedules), free sodas, a dress code that basically consists of "please, at least cover your privates somehow, if it doesn't bother you too much" (I'm sitting here in shorts and t-shirt, but I have a suit around for those "just in case" moments, some customers kinda expect that from management, no idea why) and a few more less important things.

    The pay is sub-par, though. Still, we have no problem hiring or keeping our staff. We also have a pretty impressive productivity level despite (I'd rather say because) we don't expect our techs to sit around when they're essentially still asleep. Free lunch in house means everyone's always around in case of an emergency (and yes, it does happen at times that your lunch break is cut short), and some simply eat at their desk to read some info while eating, which they'd probably do in their "working" hours instead. The flex time schedule means we have staff on site nearly around the clock without having to pay overtime for it (seriously, one guy comes in around 3pm but stays past midnight, which would not only be prohibitively expensive under normal circumstances, you also couldn't "force" someone to work those hours under our work laws), it IS kinda empty, though, at 8am. :)

    Essentially, what this means to us is that our salary levels are quite a bit below industry standard, we still do not get the "bottom of the barrel, can't get work elsewhere" idiots (quite far from it, actually), we actually have quite dedicated people who like their jobs and who really want to keep it, who willingly work "odd" hours, actually they're zealously guarding their "timeslot" where others would ask for higher wages just to think about working those times, and so on.

    I think what matters is that you simply use what people want naturally. If you FORCE people to work during evenings, they'll probably give you the finger. Offer them to choose their times and you'll be surprised how easily they do it willingly.

    --
    We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
  34. It's about time! by ebusinessmedia1 · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I have been watching this happen in Silicon Valley and other tech regions for years. It's an abomination and it's about time that it stop! I have seen L-1 visa holders from India who are here for "university studies", go to a place like Heald College for six months, come on board as *full-time* employees, with benefits (while professional non-Asian-Indian American IT professionals *with experience* were hired on as contractors). THen, I watched as the full time Americans with rock-solid skills got riffed after training the L-1 visa holder who didn't know jack, and *still* didn't know jack after a long training period.

    I have seen these H1-B, L-1 and several other visa holders come to work on the first day and start hugging and chumming around with senior Asian-Indian supervisors who were their *relatives or friends* from back home.

    I have watched as Asian Indian supervisors treat their American (and Indian) subordinates like chattel, not to mention looking right through female employees.

    I have seen Asian Indian "consulting" groups establish domestic US connections so that their workers can claim "experience with a US company for 1 year", thus enabling the visa holder to emigrate to America.

    I have listened to the likes of Bill Gates, John Chambers, Mark Zuckerberg, and many others LIE about the shortage of qualified American IT workers.

    I have talked to DOZENS of IT peers who have been out of work for more than a year because every time they aplpy for a position thety are talking to guess who? - an East-Asian-Indian recruiter who can't speak clear English, does not have a clue about what the requirements are for the position, and spouts nonsense from the their doctored RPF's that list skills like "must know C++ and Ruby" for a BASIC QA position. Are you kidding me?

    Now, our corporate overlords and these corrupt Indian companies (including the Indian government, whose corrupt officials are on the take from American corporations) want an increase in the H1-B quotas that would double those quotas AND let the spouses of these mostly UNQUALIFIED H1-Bs get an immediate right to work in America (which has not been possible by current rules). Are you kidding me.

    The entire Hi-B whine is a SCAM, and a LIE, and a TRAITOROUS double-cross of the American IT worker, and other workers who would LOVE to have the same opportunity as an L-1 worker who doesn't know crap, and still won't know crap after s/he's trained.

    Last, outside of IIT (Indian Institute of Technology) why don't we hear about the PATHETIC level of instruction and talent that comes out of most of India's other universities, where professors don't even show up, and make their real $$$ arranging private tutorials with students that can afford to pay for private lessons. Why? Because the immoral, corrupt leaches that run the Indian government don't give a rat's ass about their own people, just like the corrupt, immoral leaches in the American government.

    1. Re:It's about time! by AK+Marc · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Everyone knows it, and nobody cares. The price of freedom is eternal vigilance, and nobody cares, so we are losing freedom. the only way to fix that is to convince people to care. They don't, and they won't.

    2. Re:It's about time! by loufoque · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Can't you just use Indian instead of Asian-Indian?

  35. Lawsuit will be thrown out but.... by nomad63 · · Score: 4, Interesting

    We all know, unless you have a secret recording from the interview, some stupid employer representative says things that is not so kosher, it is impossible to prove discrimination. But, does it really mean that her lawsuit is baseless ? We, including all the competent and mostly incompetent IT workers from India, know that, infosys, tata and wipro are only functional and operational in USA, because they know how to rig and play the system. And the corrupt US politicians who in the pockets of facebooks and micro$ofts are fanning the fire by providing higher number of H1B quotas.

    Do you know the latest game infosys a-holes play ? I have been a victim of this ploy. First off they use third party, pond-scum Indian operated recruiters to make their bids, so nothing sticks to them. I am not sure how this lady got into talks with these people at infosys, directly. But anyway, infosys runs the support shop for Cisco Systems and they were looking for a UNIX heavy guy with some TCP/IP networking knowledge and they found me through some site, where I posted my resume. FIrst off the bat, they low-balled the initial offer for working in San Jose. They offered me something like 10% less money than, what I was making at my last position in Southern Cali. which is another 20-some percent cheaper to live compared to the bay area. But, considering it is better than living on an unemployment check, I agreed to interview. After about 3 or 4 botched calls by them, I had the *pleasure* of talking to an infosys employee, calling me from India, for about 30 minutes, who did the *technical* interview to judge my UNIX expertise level with few easy questions, which, someone who installed linux and played with it for a couple of days can answer. Then I got a call back from the secondary, pond-scum agency, telling me that, I past my tech-screen with flying colors. No-shit-Sherlock... I have been a UNIX sysadmin for more than 20 years and he read a book about it ?? Anyway, they wanted to offer me the position but, the BIG BUT, infosys renegotiated the rate and they have to scale back the already low hourly rate by another 15%. At that point, I told the guy to go pound sand. And I am sure, for the money they were thinking about paying, they hired an indian UNIX sysadmin, who didn't mind sharing an apartment with 5 or more others like himself.

    Maybe, just maybe, we the American IT workers should play their game and force these three clown companies from india, by filing lawsuit after lawsuit, even if it is going to be rejected. The problem is, we do not have the deep pockets. Maybe organizations like groklaw and EFF should consider mounting such a campaign. Operating on the outskirts of the law, doesn't necessarily mean that, they have the right to rape the American IT sector.

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    __________
    The more I know people, the more I love animals