
Man drags company to court over online training sessions after work hours without extra pay, demands ₹9.5 lakh
The company often required him to attend training sessions using apps like Ding Ding and WeChat. These sessions were held outside regular working hours. Employees who missed them were asked to make a 'voluntary donation' of 200 yuan (around ₹ 2,500).
Wang filed a complaint after his termination. He asked for over 80,000 yuan (more than ₹ 9.5 lakh) as unpaid overtime. He went to court after the labour office didn't accept his claim. Wang provided proof, such as screenshots of his online training and chat records with coworkers.
The company said the sessions were not real work and didn't count as overtime. Workers just had to log in and didn't need to talk or listen. They also claimed that the donation rule had not been linked to training.
The court found that the sessions had happened after working hours. The court said even if workers only had to log in, it still used up their personal time. It also noted that the donation rule showed the training was not optional.
'These activities occurred after working hours, with the employee lacking the option to decline participation. Therefore, they should be classified as overtime,' the South China Morning Post quoted the court as stating.
The court said employees could not skip these sessions, so it should be counted as overtime. In the end, Wang's evidence proved that the company did make him work extra without pay.
The court ordered the company to compensate the former employee. However, it asked it to pay a reduced amount of 19,000 yuan ( ₹ 2.30 lakh).
Workers' Daily shared the case, which is being hailed as a 'landmark' judgment. The case has received public support as many workers face similar issues.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
&w=3840&q=100)

Business Standard
5 hours ago
- Business Standard
Why Chinese are leaving property sector jobs to acquire drone skills
China has reportedly recognised 'drone flight planner' as a new profession, part of a sweeping effort to expand the country's low-altitude economy and address a widening talent shortage in the sector. The designation, made by China's Ministry of Human Resources and Social Security, comes amid a growing shift in the labour market, with workers—especially from the ailing property sector—reskilling to enter the drone industry, reported South China Morning Post. Wang Xiaojun, deputy director of the ministry's Department of Vocational Capacity Building, described the role as involving 'planning multi-drone flight paths, developing flight plans and missions, and managing operations on-site', according to the report. He said the new profession has attracted 'many tech-savvy and creative young people'. Driving growth in low-altitude airspace The low-altitude economy, covering manned and unmanned operations below 1,000 metres, has been identified by Beijing as a strategic emerging industry. It is expected to spur innovation, create jobs and inject momentum into the slowing economy, the report said. In December 2024, the National Development and Reform Commission (NDRC) set up a dedicated unit to craft policies for the sector. Despite this, the NDRC has warned of a skills shortfall—an estimated 1 million trained personnel are needed to meet demand. As of end-2024, China had only 247,300 licensed drone operators, far behind the more than 2.17 million registered drones, a near-doubling from the previous year, according to the Civil Aviation Administration of China. Property professionals eye drone careers The mounting talent gap has opened new avenues for jobseekers, especially those hit by the real estate sector's downturn. Zhang Chao, who runs drone training programmes in Yunnan province, told South China Morning Post that since mid-2024, the number of trainees has tripled to about 140 per month. Most are between 20 and 40 years old. 'Given the challenging economic environment, some people, originally from professions such as property sales, have resigned to acquire drone skills and transition into drone-related careers,' Zhang was quoted as saying by South China Morning Post. Others, he added, view it as a promising future bet or a fallback option amid growing uncertainty in traditional sectors. Students, universities adapt to new industry demand The shift is not limited to mid-career workers. A growing number of Chinese students are reportedly enrolling in drone certification courses during summer breaks. Many are high school and university students studying drone-adjacent fields. 'Several of them are majoring in fields closely related to drone technology and believe the industry will continue to grow,' Zhang said. In response to this interest, universities are adjusting. In April, the Ministry of Education approved 'low-altitude technology and engineering' as a new undergraduate major. Institutions such as Beihang University and Beijing Institute of Technology are launching related programmes from autumn 2025. India too sees drone skills push India is also witnessing a steady rise in drone-related careers, driven by agri-tech innovations, logistics trials, and government-backed skilling programmes. Under the Namo Drone Didi Scheme —launched in November 2023—15,000 women from self-help groups are being trained as drone pilots to operate agricultural drones and offer Drone-as-a-Service. The Indian Air Force and NCC are also integrating drone training. According to a Times of India report, the first batch of master instructors from NCC's OTA in Kamptee has been certified by DGCA to train cadets across India, and Maharashtra's NCC centre in Nagpur is now a regional drone training nodal centre.


Time of India
a day ago
- Time of India
Employer forced engineer to attend off-shift online training sessions; he sued for overtime pay and won
In a striking win for employee rights , a Beijing-based engineer has secured a court-ordered compensation of 19,000 yuan (approximately US$2,600) from his former employer for being compelled to attend mandatory online training sessions after regular working hours — a case now hailed as a 'landmark' in China's evolving labour rights landscape. This unusual clash over what qualifies as overtime in the age of remote work and digital communication was first reported by Workers' Daily on July 17 and has since drawn nationwide attention, sparking conversations about employee autonomy in an always-connected world. Explore courses from Top Institutes in Please select course: Select a Course Category Artificial Intelligence Data Analytics Design Thinking Product Management Management Operations Management Degree healthcare CXO Others Digital Marketing MCA Project Management Cybersecurity Data Science Leadership Finance Healthcare PGDM Data Science MBA Technology Public Policy others Skills you'll gain: Duration: 7 Months S P Jain Institute of Management and Research CERT-SPJIMR Exec Cert Prog in AI for Biz India Starts on undefined Get Details Training After Hours? Or Hidden Overtime? According to South China Morning Post, the man, identified only as Wang, had been employed as an engineer at a Beijing-based engineering firm from July 2020 until June 2023. His gripe wasn't about workload during office hours — it was about what happened after. According to Wang, his employer required him to participate in frequent online training sessions using platforms like DingTalk and WeChat, all outside his official shift. Refusing to attend came at a peculiar price: a 'voluntary donation' of 200 yuan (about US$28). Wang wasn't buying it. He filed for arbitration, seeking over 80,000 yuan (US$11,000) in unpaid overtime. However, when the labour authority failed to support his claim, he took the battle to court. Employer's Defence: Log In, Zone Out? In its defence, the company argued that these post-shift sessions didn't constitute overtime since there was no active work involved. Logging in, they claimed, was merely symbolic — employees weren't required to speak or even pay attention. As such, they contended, no actual labour occurred, and therefore no compensation was warranted. You Might Also Like: Female MNC employee wanted work-life balance; got fired for refusing to work overtime They also denied any connection between the training sessions and the 200-yuan donation, suggesting that the two were unrelated policies. Court Calls Out 'Encroachment of Personal Time' The Beijing No. 2 Intermediate People's Court disagreed. It held that the very requirement of logging into a scheduled session during personal time was itself an intrusion, regardless of whether verbal participation or listening was enforced. Most crucially, the court observed that the presence of a punitive 'donation' policy suggested the sessions were effectively compulsory. 'These activities occurred after working hours, with the employee lacking the option to decline participation. Therefore, they should be classified as overtime,' the court ruled. However, it also acknowledged inconsistencies in Wang's login times and awarded him a partial sum — 19,000 yuan instead of the 80,000 he had originally sought. You Might Also Like: IIT professor has ingenius idea to make corporate leaders champions of work-life balance overnight Digital Boundaries and Labour Laws Government-affiliated news portal lauded the court's verdict, describing it as carrying 'landmark significance.' An editorial published by the platform sharply noted the creeping intrusion of work into personal time through digital tools, calling such expectations 'hidden overtime.' 'With the evolution of communication tools, the encroachment of work into employees' personal lives is increasingly prevalent,' the editorial stated. 'Even when not physically present in the office or officially off duty, a message on a mobile device can pull them back into work.' The case underscores an increasingly urgent global dilemma: where should the boundary lie between personal time and professional obligation in an era where the office is just a screen away?


Time of India
2 days ago
- Time of India
Meta names former OpenAI researcher Shengjia Zhao as Chief scientist for superintelligence lab
Meta Platforms has appointed Shengjia Zhao , a former OpenAI researcher and co-author of the original ChatGPT paper, as the Chief Scientist of its new Superintelligence AI group, the company confirmed Friday (July 25). Zhao, who joined Meta in June, was a key contributor to OpenAI's early breakthroughs, including the development of ChatGPT and the company's first reasoning model, known as o1. The model helped set off a new wave of 'chain-of-thought' AI systems adopted by companies such as Google and DeepSeek. Explore courses from Top Institutes in Please select course: Select a Course Category Digital Marketing MCA Finance PGDM Data Science Project Management Design Thinking Public Policy Healthcare Data Science Operations Management Leadership Management CXO Degree MBA Cybersecurity Others Artificial Intelligence Product Management Technology others Data Analytics healthcare Skills you'll gain: Digital Marketing Strategy Search Engine Optimization (SEO) & Content Marketing Social Media Marketing & Advertising Data Analytics & Measurement Duration: 24 Weeks Indian School of Business Professional Certificate Programme in Digital Marketing Starts on Jun 26, 2024 Get Details Skills you'll gain: Digital Marketing Strategies Customer Journey Mapping Paid Advertising Campaign Management Emerging Technologies in Digital Marketing Duration: 12 Weeks Indian School of Business Digital Marketing and Analytics Starts on May 14, 2024 Get Details Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg announced Zhao's formal appointment in a post on Threads, calling him 'our lead scientist from day one.' Zuckerberg added: 'Now that our recruiting is going well and our team is coming together, we have decided to formalize his leadership role.' by Taboola by Taboola Sponsored Links Sponsored Links Promoted Links Promoted Links You May Like They Lost Their Money - Learn From Their Lesson Best Solutions | Search ads Undo Zhao will report to Alexandr Wang, the former CEO of Scale AI, who joined Meta in June as Chief AI Officer. Wang is leading Meta's efforts in building artificial general intelligence (AGI), AI that can think and reason at or beyond human capability. Aggressive AI push Live Events The move comes amid Meta's aggressive recruitment campaign in the AI sector. Over the past two months, the company has hired more than a dozen researchers from OpenAI, Apple, Google, and Anthropic. That includes two top Apple AI scientists, Tom Gunter and Mark Lee, according to Bloomberg. Meta launched the Superintelligence Lab in June 2025 as part of its renewed focus on developing advanced AI models. The lab is separate from Meta's long-standing AI research group FAIR, which will continue to be led by Yann LeCun, who now reports to Wang. Talent and tensions Meta's recent hires have drawn attention for the size of the compensation packages involved. Some reports suggested offers exceeding $100 million, although the company has denied rumors of higher figures, including claims of $300 million deals. Meta's current open-source model, LLaMA 4, has not yet matched the capabilities of OpenAI's GPT-4 or Google's Gemini models. The company is expected to release a more advanced model, internally codenamed 'Behemoth,' later this year. Zuckerberg expressed optimism about the lab's future, saying, 'Together we are building an elite, talent-dense team that has the resources and long-term focus to push the frontiers of superintelligence research.'