Reddit Is Laying Off Employees
Reddit is reportedly laying off employees as the company moves toward an IPO and faces a user revolt over its recent policies. According to The Wall Street Journal, Reddit plans to lay off as many as 90 employees and will slow hiring in an effort to restructure its business. The moves come as the company is preparing to go public. The layoffs will impact roughly 90 employees, or 5% of the company’s overall workforce. “We’ve had a solid first half of the year, and this restructuring will position us to carry that momentum into the second half and beyond,” CEO Steve Huffman said in an email to employees that was seen by WSJ. The layoffs also come at a time when Reddit is under fire for changes to its API access, charging third-party app developers in a move that could see some of the most popular apps disappear. Reddit has responded to the backlash by blocking some users that have supported a planned subreddit blackout protesting the company’s decisions.
Related Recommendations
-
Google Introduces 'Trending Searches' and 'Instant Answers' to iOS App
-
We Finally Know When Amazon’s Second Prime Day Event Is
-
Twitter Whistleblower Lends Weight to Elon Musk's Claims
-
Texas AG Sues Google for ‘Unauthorized’ Biometric Data Collection
-
Google Reports On How It Fought Web Spam in 2015
-
TikTok Is Gen Z's Search Engine of Choice and Is Rife With Misinformation