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by ajross
2608 days ago
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> If they didn't build it well, you throw it away, and you're only out what you paid the temporary worker and your code review/acceptance test. Yeah, and that logic is almost inherently a violation of labor law. The whole idea behind allowing "internships" at all is that the intern is deriving value (education) from the relationship that isn't captured by wages alone. The test for whether it's legal involves how much they are supervised by the people who are supposed to be teaching them. Handing out throwaway projects like you posit is an easy trip to a class action suit. |
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I live with an HR exec and read some of this thread to her while she was cutting rhubarb for something she's baking.
She said (paraphrased), "Are you kidding? This is a perfect project for a summer intern. They won't have to take three months to get up to speed with all your internal systems, and of course there is educational value - they will get to see how some talented developers tackled the problem in one language while they translate it to another."