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Google, Apple, Abobe and Intel to pay £324m in wage-fixing lawsuit

 

Jack Simpson
Friday 25 April 2014 13:37 BST
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Four of the world’s largest tech companies have agreed an out of court settlement with a group of employees that claimed they had organised an employment agreement that would control worker movement and keep the salaries of Silicon Valley’s workers down.

Companies Apple, Google, Intel and Adobe agreed to pay out £324million to the group and avoid lawsuit proceedings that were due to begin next month.

The class action case was brought against the tech giants on behalf of almost 64,000 workers in 2011, after they alleged that all four companies had conspired to organise employment arrangements that would prevent companies from poaching each other’s workers.

It was felt that by partaking in the arrangement companies were restricting the ability for workers to move between companies and as a result reduce the employer competition.

It was argued that by limiting this competition, the four named tech companies could control wages and, as a consequence, keep them low.

Amongst the bosses to be allegedly involved in these agreements was deceased former CEO of Apple, Steve Jobs.

A set of email exchanges that were to be used as evidence to support the lawsuit are reported to show Jobs and former Google chief executive Eric Schmidt agreeing to fire a Google recruiter after he was identified as being responsible for soliciting an Apple employee for Google.

In the exchange Schmidt is seen telling Jobs that the recruiter will be fired as a result of his actions, to this Jobs replied with a smiley face.

Other examples put forward by the team filing the lawsuit, reportedly show Schmidt advising discretion when it came to sharing the company’s no-cold call agreements with competitors.

According to a court filing, Schmidt told a Google human resource manager that he preferred the agreement to be shared verbally, as he “didn’t want to create a paper trail over which we can be sued later?'"

For the four companies involved, the settlement represents just a fraction of the money that they could have had to pay-out if the court proceedings went ahead and they lost.

The lawsuit from the employees demanded $3 million, and this could have tripled to almost $9 million under US anti-trust laws.

The portion of the $324 million that each of the companies will have to pay will be a drop in the ocean when compared to the profits each company records on a yearly basis.

In the first quarter of 2014, Google has already recorded profits of £15.4 billion. While Apple supplemented with a high level of iPad and iPhone 5 sales, has seen their profits rise to £10.6 billion.

While the companies agree that some employment arrangements were made, they say that these were never with the intention of keeping wages down.

Both Intel and Adobe, who were also accused of being part of the agreements, said that they denied any wrongdoing.

Adobe said in a statement: "We firmly believe that our recruiting policies have in no way diminished competition for talent in the marketplaces.''

While, Chuck Mulloy, spokesman for Intel, said the firm chose to settle "to avoid the risks, burdens and uncertainties of ongoing litigation.''

Google and Apple declined to comment.

This isn’t the first time that Google and Apple have been embroiled in a case of in which they have tried to manufacture employment agreements with other Silicon Valley companies.

In 2008, Facebook, who are against employment agreements, rebuffed Google’s offer of entering an employment agreement after Facebook had solicited a number of Google programmers.

This was followed by a threat from Apple’s Jobs to take out a patent lawsuit against Smart manufacturers Palm if they did not agree to stop poaching Apple employees.

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