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US Labor Organization AFL-CIO Urges Game Developers To Unionize In Open Letter (gamasutra.com)

An anonymous reader quotes a report from Gamasutra: In the wake of Activision Blizzard's massive layoff wave, a move that was announced in the same call as the company's record quarter, the union federation AFL-CIO has published an open letter to game developers urging members of the industry to organize. The AFL-CIO itself is the largest labor organization in the United States and counts 55 individual unions (and more than 12.5 million workers) among its affiliates. The letter, readable in full on Kotaku, calls out many of the issues that have prompted conversations about unionization in just recent years like excessive crunch, toxic work conditions, inadequate pay, and job instability. The industry, points out AFL-CIO's secretary-treasurer Liz Shuler, boasted sales 3.6 times greater than those of the film industry in 2018, yet much of that financial success isn't felt by the developers working on the games that generate those billions. "Executives are always quick to brag about your work. It's the talk of every industry corner office and boardroom. They pay tribute to the games that capture our imaginations and seem to defy economic gravity. They talk up the latest innovations in virtual reality and celebrate record-smashing releases, as your creations reach unparalleled new heights," says Shuler.

"My question is this: what have you gotten in return? They get rich. They get notoriety. They get to be crowned visionaries and regarded as pioneers. What do you get? Outrageous hours and inadequate paychecks. Stressful, toxic work conditions that push you to your physical and mental limits. The fear that asking for better means risking your dream job. [...] Change will happen when you gain leverage by joining together in a strong union. And, it will happen when you use your collective voice to bargain for a fair share of the wealth you create every day. No matter where you work, bosses will only offer fair treatment when you stand together and demand it."

4 of 158 comments (clear)

  1. Socialist drivel by Anonymous Coward · · Score: -1, Troll

    Not buying it, you douchebag commie highschool spoiled brat BeauHD.

  2. A Union Promoting Forming a Union... by atouk · · Score: 0, Troll

    ...imagine that! And after it's done, send us money so we can chase another industry offshore by making demands to publishers. But hey, we're doing it to protect you... This isn't a boots on the ground industry like mining or trucking, this is a job that can be done from anywhere (and cheaper). Yes, quality may suffer, but that's going to be what hurts them, not strikes. Bad games don't (well, they shouldn't), sell.

    1. Re:A Union Promoting Forming a Union... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Troll

      >The game industry isn't any different from the film industry
      One is filled with kikes, the other isn't (but that's changing (and that's a good thing!))

  3. Re:Bullshit by roman_mir · · Score: -1, Troll

    The only acceptable union IMNSHO is a union by people in an industry (as an example) against *government* oppression and violence. All other types of professional unions are simply a way that government uses people to attack capital and business owners, which is the opposite of what needs to happen to have a working economy.