A lawsuit was filed against Reddit alleging that the company fired an employee with anxiety for taking medical leave. The employee, Jamie Lee, had worked at Reddit as an accountant for over 4 years with positive reviews. In July 2022, Lee requested 3 days off for her health but was denied. She was later placed on medical leave after fainting, but was fired upon returning and accused of poor performance. However, the lawsuit claims others made similar mistakes. It also alleges Reddit’s new leadership under the CFO has created a “toxic, political, and not inclusive” culture, which two other employees also left over. This highlights challenges employees faced with the changing culture at Reddit.

  • astraeus@programming.dev
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    1 year ago

    It’s reddit, what in the hell do they have going on at the end of July that couldn’t accounting couldn’t wait a few days for? Did they have to count up all the gains from the fake gold they’ve stopped selling people? Tax season is over, the new fiscal year is already started, seems like bullshit paper pushing to me.

    • Semi-Hemi-Demigod@kbin.social
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      1 year ago

      Their software was open source. Their content is free. Their moderation is free. All they had to do was sell some ads and host the servers. And they fucked that up.

      • Otter@lemmy.ca
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        1 year ago

        Yep this is pretty much what I came into the thread to read about. I’m sure the claims have merit and I don’t doubt that Reddit could have a toxic work culture (just look at the decision making over the years, clearly people aren’t comfortable pushing back against bad ideas)

        Just usually when I hear about toxic grind culture, the company is producing something, be it content or some competitive product.

        Reddit is doing what other open source devs are doing for free, and somehow doing that badly. The app is bad, the front end for new Reddit is constantly buggy, and it takes a very long time for things to get fixed.

        What are they doing to the workers…

    • harmonea@kbin.social
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      1 year ago

      You have to understand that most accounting departments treat month-end with the same gravity as year-end. My job’s accounts payable department starts sending month end deadline reminders on the 15th. It’s absurd how much they focus on it.

      (This is not an excuse for their abhorrent treatment of an employee, mind you, but it might help explain the twisted logic behind “end of July” possibly working against her.)

      • astraeus@programming.dev
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        1 year ago

        Point aside, what’s reddit doing that taking three days off for health makes it impossible to meet deadlines? What exactly are they juggling in that accounting department that demands so much from a single employee? Sounds like she was overworked and overwhelmed from the start.

    • Whirlybird
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      1 year ago

      Month end is a big deal in accounting every single month, not just at the end of the financial year.