Photo credits, clockwise from top left: Matt Cosby, Elizabeth Weinberg, Peter Prato, Eirik Johnson and Maddie McGarvey.

Into the Valley

Google Engineers, Uber Drivers, and the Voices of a New Tech Labor Revolution

Inside an unprecedented surge of activism in the tech industry

OneZero
Published in
17 min readFeb 24, 2020

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This article is part of Into the Valley, a feature series from OneZero about Silicon Valley, the people who live there, and the technology they create.

OnOn November 1, 2018, thousands of Google workers streamed out of offices across the world holding signs with messages reading “not ok Google,” and “worker’s rights are women’s rights.” In Mountain View, New York City, Dublin, Tokyo, and Singapore, protestors pushed back against the sense that Google was protecting executives credibly accused of sexual harassment.

Seeing tech workers, a group that had long been considered “unorganizable,” flood the streets in protest was something new. But in the last two years, workers in every sector of tech, from full-time engineers, to contract workers, to gig workers, and those on work visas have caught the collective action bug.

In November 2019, Uber and Lyft drivers seeking better conditions and pay staged demonstrations at the homes of investors made rich by their labor. In response to family separations at the Mexican border, Microsoft employees circulated a letter asking the company to stop…

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OneZero

The undercurrents of the future. A Medium publication about tech and science.