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Justice Department Slaps IBM Over H-1B Hiring Practices

Dawn Kawamoto writes "IBM reached a settlement with the Justice Department over allegations it posted discriminatory online job openings, allegedly stating a preference for H-1B and foreign student visa holders for its software and apps developer positions. The job openings were for IT positions that would eventually require the applicant to relocate overseas. IBM agreed to pay $44,400 in civil penalties to the U.S., as well as take certain actions in the way it hires within the U.S. The settlement, announced Friday, comes at a time with tech companies are calling for the U.S. to allow more H-1B workers into the country."

5 of 195 comments (clear)

  1. Are you F*cking kidding me!!! by msmonroe · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Could the justice department do any less? The fines are a joke.

    1. Re:Are you F*cking kidding me!!! by kpainter · · Score: 5, Funny

      No shit! They could hire at least 4 dudes for that $44K!!

  2. $44,400 fine -- That'll teach 'em! by innocent_white_lamb · · Score: 5, Funny

    Yep, a whole $44,400 fine. That's got to sting a multi-billion dollar company. Bet they won't dare try that again.

    --
    If you're a zombie and you know it, bite your friend!
    1. Re:$44,400 fine -- That'll teach 'em! by Mitreya · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Yep, a whole $44,400 fine.

      Good thing they did not download an mp3 file illegally. Because that could have cost much more!

  3. Computer programming is not IT! by CommanderK · · Score: 5, Funny

    Both the summary and some commenters make the same huge mistake by putting IT people and programmers in the same bucket. A C++ programmer has completely different skills and responsibilities from a PHP/HTML programmer, who has a completely different job from a network/system administrator. The latter could be considered IT (and their pay is usually lower), whereas the former are developers (requiring extra creativity and more skill, and are better paid). In my experience working in the Bay Area, there really is a shortage of competent high-skill systems developers/programmers (the kind of guys who design Google and Facebook infrastructure, like Big Table), but not a shortage of PHP or Java programmers or sysadmins.