> As someone with friends in that specific Google office - I can tell you that employees have been told NOTHING.
I'm talking about contacting the people that may have come into contact with the sick employee not contacting the entire office. How do we know that's not being done? We don't have any details here to draw conclusions that this isn't being handled correctly. We don't know if the employee wasn't already working from home, came back from a vacation, was into office very little time or made very little contact with coworkers. You're assuming the worst, that the employee in question was mingling with everyone for days while being sick and then that the announcement going out on Friday was somehow too late (that the management was made aware of it for many days before the announcement went out).
> Google didn't even send the email until AFTER business hours on Friday.
Is that too late? How long did Google know about the sick employee as being confirmed with this virus before they decided to make a public announcement about it?
I'm talking about contacting the people that may have come into contact with the sick employee not contacting the entire office. How do we know that's not being done? We don't have any details here to draw conclusions that this isn't being handled correctly. We don't know if the employee wasn't already working from home, came back from a vacation, was into office very little time or made very little contact with coworkers. You're assuming the worst, that the employee in question was mingling with everyone for days while being sick and then that the announcement going out on Friday was somehow too late (that the management was made aware of it for many days before the announcement went out).
> Google didn't even send the email until AFTER business hours on Friday.
Is that too late? How long did Google know about the sick employee as being confirmed with this virus before they decided to make a public announcement about it?