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Ask HN: What is the point with Remote work if you can't work abroad?
4 points by eewfdsfsfds 1031 days ago
Getting real tired companies that "support" remote work but still want you to be located in a city or a specific country.

I think we should use another term since remote no longer means what (at least what I think) it used to be.

Suggestions on new terms:

Distributed work, workforce is distributed across countries

Asynchronous work, https://about.gitlab.com/company/culture/all-remote/asynchronous/

What do you think?

5 comments

Don't blame the company, blame the governments of the world for their differing tax and employment rules.
You can work abroad, just don't say anything and follow the laws. Make sure you don't spend the maximum time outside the US to be considered a resident, don't over stay in what ever country you choose to work from (90 days Schengen Zone every 180 day period), Canada is 90 days, etc. Don't even tell your employer if they let you work from home and don't require to come in.
...You realize that any moderately sized corporation will monitor things like changes in IP address correlate with changes in location for compliance purposes?

That the fines assessed against the employer for allowing work to take place that violates the terms of immigration based eork visas is quite stiff?

Unfortunately, your advice is downright terrible and simply will not work. Most of the western world has outsourced immigration enforcement onto their private employers. While it may not have been a big deal in earlier times, the mapping of the IP space, and geolocation capabilities based off of it are an omnipresent to the modern corp. We alread live in the dystopian surveillance hellscape.

What organization is going to monitor IP addresses from an IdP or VPN service log for where an employee might be sitting?

If there was some sort of suspicion, sure, but it is very unlikely an org is going to monitor logs in real time for company-wide human resource purposes.

Not paying (in time or money) for a coummute.

Being able to deal with things at home (let plumbers in, put washing on).

Living wherever you want within the nation.

Tax laws, healthcare, etc.
Yes, I imagine employing someone who lives in another country is not trivial. If they were a contractor with payments to a company I think it would be more straightforward.
Home-based. Cottage industry.