logo
Google offers buyouts to more workers amid AI-driven tech upheaval

Google offers buyouts to more workers amid AI-driven tech upheaval

Google has offered buyouts to another swath of its workforce across several key divisions in a fresh round of cost cutting coming ahead of a court decision that could order a breakup of its internet empire. The Mountain View, California, company confirmed the streamlining that was reported by several news outlets.
It's not clear how many employees are affected, but the offers were made to staff in Google's search, advertising, research and engineering units, according to The Wall Street Journal. Google employs most of the nearly 186,000 workers on the worldwide payroll of its parent company, Alphabet Inc.
'Earlier this year, some of our teams introduced a voluntary exit program with severance for U.S.-based Googlers, and several more are now offering the program to support our important work ahead," a Google spokesperson, Courtenay Mencini, said in a statement.
'A number of teams are also asking remote employees who live near an office to return to a hybrid work schedule in order to bring folks more together in-person,' Mencini said.
Also read: To cut costs, Google offers voluntary exits in search, ads, and engineering teams
Google is offering the buyouts while awaiting for a federal judge to determine its fate after its ubiquitous search engine was declared an illegal monopoly as part of nearly 5-year-old case by the U.S. Justice Department. The company is also awaiting remedy action in another antitrust case involving its digital ad network.
U.S. District Judge Amit Mehta is weighing a government proposal seeking to ban Google paying more than $26 billon annually to Apple and other technology companies to lock in its search engine as the go-to place for online information, require it to share data with rivals and force a sale of its popular Chrome browser. The judge is expected to rule before Labor Day, clearing the way for Google to pursue its plan to appeal last year's decision that labeled its search engine as a monopoly.
The proposed dismantling coincides with ongoing efforts by the Justice Department to force Google to part with some of the technology powering the company's digital ad network after a federal judge ruled that its digital ad network has been improperly abusing its market power to stifle competition to the detriment of online publishers. Like several of its peers in Big Tech, Google has been periodically reducing its headcount since 2023 as the industry began to backtrack from the hiring spree that was triggered during pandemic lockdowns that spurred feverish demand for digital services.
Google began its post-pandemic retrenchment by laying off 12,000 workers in early 2023 and since then as been trimming some divisions to help bolster its profits while ramping up its spending on artificial intelligence ,a technology driving an upheaval that is starting to transform its search engine into a more conversational answer engine.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Netizens claim major internet outage caused by cyberattack, all details on Cloudflare, GCP downtime here
Netizens claim major internet outage caused by cyberattack, all details on Cloudflare, GCP downtime here

Mint

time3 hours ago

  • Mint

Netizens claim major internet outage caused by cyberattack, all details on Cloudflare, GCP downtime here

An internet outage on a massive scale this Wednesday, caused a downtime for Google Cloud, and Cloudflare. Meanwhile, netizens are crediting this major outage to a large-scale cyberattack. However, Google or Cloudflare have not yet issued any official statements related to this cyberattack yet, as per reports. There are still no confirmed links to the internet outage or the downtime of these services by the tech giants with any cyberattack, but Downdetector has witnessed an increasing number of users experiencing downtime. According to a Times Now report, other services like Spotify, Discord, Fubo, and Twitch are also among the services that have been affected drastically due to the internet outage on Wednesday, according to reports. 'Outage reports for music streamer Spotify in particular, peaked around 3 p.m. Eastern Standard Time before dropping off, and some users began saying their access was restored,' says AP. Even though an official confirmation is still awaited, it is likely that the disruption in services of these platforms were due to the overall downtime of cloud services like GCP, or Cloudflare. 'Google's Cloud status page said an incident with their systems affected clients in the U.S. and abroad. The company also posted that services are starting to recover after its engineers identified and began to mitigate the issue,' an AP report read. 'We have identified the root cause and applied appropriate mitigations,' Google Cloud said. It added that there is no estimate for when the issue would be fully resolved, as per AP. Meanwhile, a Grok AI query response on X said, 'It's true, a major internet outage hit on June 12, 2025, affecting Google Cloud, Spotify, Discord, and more, starting around 2 p.m. ET. Likely caused by Google Cloud authentication issues, it disrupted many services.' 'Google and Cloudflare are investigating, with some services possibly recovering, but the situation is still unfolding as of 3:27 PM PDT,' the Grok AI response read. A social media post read, 'AWS, Azure, Google Cloud all down. What the heck is going on? Is this an international cyberattack?' However, a user commented on this post, claiming that AWS is not down. Meanwhile, a response was received on CloudFlare's behalf, which suggests that this is a Google Cloud outage. The response also says, 'A limited number of services at Cloudflare use Google Cloud and were impacted. We expect them to come back shortly. The core Cloudflare services were not impacted.'

Spotify, Discord, Gmail, YouTube, GMeet and more suffer outage; Google confirms issue with Google Cloud, says ...
Spotify, Discord, Gmail, YouTube, GMeet and more suffer outage; Google confirms issue with Google Cloud, says ...

Time of India

time4 hours ago

  • Time of India

Spotify, Discord, Gmail, YouTube, GMeet and more suffer outage; Google confirms issue with Google Cloud, says ...

Google Cloud said that multiple products were experiencing varying levels of service impact. A widespread outage at Alphabet's Google Cloud on Thursday (June 12) disrupted services for tens of thousands of users across major platforms, including Spotify, Discord, Snapchat, Twitch, Anthropic, and Shopify. Several Google services, such as Gmail, Google Meet, and YouTube, also faced issues, according to reports. Google Cloud acknowledged the problem on its status page, stating that multiple products were experiencing varying levels of service disruption. "Our engineers are continuing to mitigate the issue, and we have confirmation that the issue is recovered in some locations," Google Cloud said, though it could not provide a timeline for full resolution. Downdetector, which tracks outages based on user reports, recorded over 10,000 incidents related to Google Cloud and more than 44,000 reports for Spotify around 2:46 p.m. ET in the U.S. Additionally, users reported over 4,000 incidents each for Google Meet and Google Search, and more than 8,000 for Discord. Cloudflare, which also reported an outage on Thursday, clarified through spokesperson Alexander Modiano that its core services were unaffected, attributing the issue to Google Cloud's disruption. The number of affected users may be higher than reported, as Downdetector's data relies on user-submitted reports. What Google said on the outage Google Cloud's status page initially didn't list any issues, but later updated to report 'Multiple GCP products are experiencing impact due to Identity and Access Management Service Issue.' The most recent note from Google, posted at 3:41PM ET (1.10 am IST), says: Our engineers have identified the root cause and have applied appropriate mitigations. While our engineers have confirmed that the underlying dependency is recovered in all locations except us-central1, we are aware that customers are still experiencing varying degrees of impact on individual google cloud products. All the respective engineering teams are actively engaged and working on service recovery. We do not have an ETA for full service recovery. Incident affecting Agent Assist, Cloud Data Fusion, Cloud Firestore, Cloud Memorystore, Cloud Shell, Cloud Workstations, Contact Center Insights, Dialogflow CX, Dialogflow ES, Google App Engine, Google BigQuery, Google Cloud Bigtable, Google Cloud Console, Google Cloud Dataproc, Google Cloud Storage, Identity Platform, Identity and Access Management, Memorystore for Memcached, Memorystore for Redis, Memorystore for Redis Cluster, Speech-to-Text, Text-to-Speech, Vertex AI Search. AI Masterclass for Students. Upskill Young Ones Today!– Join Now

Why Google and Latin America's largest airline LATAM are fighting a court battle over a YouTube video
Why Google and Latin America's largest airline LATAM are fighting a court battle over a YouTube video

Time of India

time5 hours ago

  • Time of India

Why Google and Latin America's largest airline LATAM are fighting a court battle over a YouTube video

Alphabet's Google has reportedly launched a legal battle against Chile-based LATAM Airlines in a U.S. federal court in San Jose, California, seeking to block Brazilian courts from forcing the removal of a YouTube video in the United States. Tired of too many ads? go ad free now The video, which alleges that a LATAM employee sexually abused a child, has sparked a heated dispute over jurisdictional reach, Reuters reported. Google's lawsuit argues that LATAM is attempting to bypass U.S. constitutional protections for free speech by leveraging Brazilian courts to demand the video's global removal. "LATAM is trying to sidestep U.S. law," the filing stated, accusing the airline of overreaching its authority. LATAM Airlines did not immediately respond to Reuters' inquiries regarding Google's claims. Jose Castaneda, a Google spokesperson, emphasized the company's stance, stating, "Google has consistently upheld the principle that a country's courts can govern content within its borders but should not dictate what is accessible in other nations." What is the Google vs LATAM case about At the heart of the current dispute is a 2018 YouTube video uploaded by Raymond Moreira, a Florida resident and U.S. citizen. The video features his 6-year-old son describing alleged sexual abuse by a LATAM employee during a trip as an unaccompanied minor. In 2020, Moreira sued LATAM in Florida over the incident, reaching a confidential settlement. LATAM responded by filing a lawsuit in Brazil in 2018, seeking to compel Google, YouTube's parent company, to remove the video. Brazil's highest court is set to decide next week whether it can mandate a worldwide takedown. Tired of too many ads? go ad free now Google's Thursday filing in California asks the court to affirm that LATAM cannot enforce such a removal in the U.S. What Google vs LATAM case shows The case mirrors a February lawsuit in Florida, where Trump Media and Rumble, two right-wing social media platforms, challenged a Brazilian judge's order to delete U.S.-based accounts linked to a supporter of former Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro. A federal judge in that case ruled that the platforms were not required to comply with the Brazilian directive in the U.S. This case highlights ongoing tensions over global content regulation. In a similar 2018 case, Canada's Supreme Court ordered Google to remove certain search results worldwide, but a California judge blocked its enforcement in the U.S. in 2017, underscoring the challenges of reconciling national laws with global digital platforms.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store