Sounds like a couple of guys following their "guy" to his new pastures. A personal loyalty thing ("plus we'll all get rich while we do it").
cyanydeez · 26m ago
As a outside skeptical observer, i just dont think executives are as valuable as individual contributors.
Certainly when there are exceptions they do drive innovation, so the myth making i observe is more like magic the gathering and opening up packs to find rare cards and trying to follow the current meta strategies and beat them.
Unfortunately, LLMs are really good at the same bullshit Steve Jobs was, and just as failable when taken confidently out of context and non appropiately assessed.
_Algernon_ · 7h ago
Poaching is a strange verb to use. It implies that Apple has some intrinsic right to their labor and that meta has done something unethical by making them a better offer.
That's simply not how employment works.
halJordan · 1h ago
It is poaching. They made an agreement with Apple to work for Apple, and Meta did disrespect that by poaching them. Thats exactly how employment works.
You're denying fundamental human demands for fairness and equity. Of course it's poaching
zug_zug · 1h ago
You can't have it both-ways. Either employment is at-will or it's not.
An implication that companies don't have a right to make a better offer to anyone (or that employees don't have the right to leave on a dime) is an implication that illegal marketplace collusion is going on.
_Algernon_ · 21m ago
I could agree to this argument if they broke their employment contract's clause about notice period, but there is no evidence from TFA that that is the case (and I'd assume Apple would use whatever legal means they have to enforce a contract in such a case).
>You're denying fundamental human demands for fairness and equity. Of course it's poaching
I disagree. Apple could fire these people at will. Fairness is that they can quit and move to a better offer by a competitor at will.
richwater · 48m ago
> They made an agreement with Apple to work for Apple, and Meta did disrespect that by poaching them
Might be the biggest bootlick statement I've ever seen on this forum.
Companies have 0 right to "claim" you. They'd fire you with no second thought.
redwood · 7h ago
True but I think they're coming out of from a different orientation. Namely that presumably working on AI as an executive at Apple should be one of the dream jobs.
So the deeper point is that things are problematic enough at Apple that an executive in a dream job would consider leaving and not just leave but go to a company that's brand is fairly toxic but nevertheless is so aggressively investing in AI to pull off all kinds of brand washing
em500 · 6h ago
How is working on AI at Apple more of the dream job than working on AI at Meta? If Meta offers say 10, 20 or 30% more, why wouldn't anyone move?
bonestamp2 · 6h ago
After a certain point, more money isn't a motivator to everyone.
sigmoid10 · 6h ago
According to reports, Meta is offering compensation that literally amounts to generational wealth. If you know you and none of your children and grandchildren will ever have to worry about money anymore, would you care which mindless tech tycoon you work for?
cyanydeez · 25m ago
I mean, trading functional democracy for money is a interesting gamble.
khurs · 5h ago
Apple has a cool HQ, great physical products. Makes own chips.
Money aside, Apple is way cooler.
cyanydeez · 24m ago
Apple fan boys will need their own senior care facilities.
The term poaching is common, but is a word that overemphasized the importance of the hirer.
There are 3 parties involved. The worker choosing to accept a better offer. The hiring company making a better offer. The previous employer offering unsatisfactory terms.
The term "poaching" suggests that the departing employee is being "stolen" or "taken" from their current employer, implying a sense of ownership over that individual. Employees are not property; they are individuals with the right to seek better opportunities and make their own career choices.
jimbob45 · 7h ago
I remember the good old days when Google did this to Microsoft and Ballmer would be in the headlines for yeeting office chairs weekly. Not sure how well that played out for Google.
Certainly when there are exceptions they do drive innovation, so the myth making i observe is more like magic the gathering and opening up packs to find rare cards and trying to follow the current meta strategies and beat them.
Unfortunately, LLMs are really good at the same bullshit Steve Jobs was, and just as failable when taken confidently out of context and non appropiately assessed.
That's simply not how employment works.
You're denying fundamental human demands for fairness and equity. Of course it's poaching
An implication that companies don't have a right to make a better offer to anyone (or that employees don't have the right to leave on a dime) is an implication that illegal marketplace collusion is going on.
>You're denying fundamental human demands for fairness and equity. Of course it's poaching
I disagree. Apple could fire these people at will. Fairness is that they can quit and move to a better offer by a competitor at will.
Might be the biggest bootlick statement I've ever seen on this forum.
Companies have 0 right to "claim" you. They'd fire you with no second thought.
So the deeper point is that things are problematic enough at Apple that an executive in a dream job would consider leaving and not just leave but go to a company that's brand is fairly toxic but nevertheless is so aggressively investing in AI to pull off all kinds of brand washing
Money aside, Apple is way cooler.
There are 3 parties involved. The worker choosing to accept a better offer. The hiring company making a better offer. The previous employer offering unsatisfactory terms.
The term "poaching" suggests that the departing employee is being "stolen" or "taken" from their current employer, implying a sense of ownership over that individual. Employees are not property; they are individuals with the right to seek better opportunities and make their own career choices.