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by nostrademons
5738 days ago
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If that's the reasoning, why are FaceBook and Twitter not included? They have a good reputation among tech people, a bunch of engineers working for them, and (in FaceBook's case at least) they push salaries up a lot. The particular companies involved make me think this really is about good partnership relations - until Android, Apple and Google had a really good relationship, Apple and Pixer share a head honcho, they all buy from Intel, Intuit's not really a competitor to any of them, etc. The effect, of course, is to drive down wages for the employees who would otherwise have been poached, and that's why the DoJ got involved. But I doubt that execs at each of those companies were telling themselves "We're going to drive down wages for our key employees" when they made the policy. |
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I also believe that collusion was made much easier by the existing good relationships you refer to.
Where we may part ways is on what the execs were saying to themselves. I don't think it was just about maintaining good relations. I believe it was about reducing the cost of having to replace key institutional knowledge. It is worth skipping out on raw talent (that will need training) if it results in keeping key people.
Which brings us back to my point. Microsoft, Oracle and Yahoo do not have good reputations among tech people. So they are not major threats to losing institutional knowledge. And they are a great source of candidates. So it isn't in the interests of Apple, Google, etc to extend the agreement to those companies.
Kind of the same problem that kept it from happening with Facebook, but with the roles reversed.