Jobs

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A community to discuss jobs, whether that's regarding to the search, advice on how to negotiate an offer, or just an open forum to vent.

This is not a place intended for you to post job listings.

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submitted 1 month ago* (last edited 1 month ago) by Allstrive@lemmy.world to c/jobs@lemmy.world
 
 

I am aware that applying for jobs actually has very little to no probability. Which platform is preferable while looking for work and wishing to apply? Please let me know in the comment if there are any platforms that I'm missing that are truly useful. Many thanks to all!

LinkedIn, Naukri, Indeed

Mention others in the comments if any!

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cross-posted from: https://lemmy.ml/post/45059519

Ever seen our AOSP based apps (Phone,Messages,Gallery...) & thought I could make a difference to bring them up?

We're seeking a senior Android engineer to take ownership of the default app suite:

https://grapheneos.org/hiring#android-apps-software-engineer

Code standard is high, vibe coders need not apply.

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So, this is my first job for a well and Pump company, it's a small company, but it's been running 5+ years and is worth over a million, thing is, I'm miserable, this job has had me stressed out so much that I started thinking of switching.

A few months back, in a morning meeting, I can't quite remember the context, but I do remember saying that "this wasn't where I saw myself" which is true, I'm a very techie person doing manual labor, even spent several years in college before getting burnt out doing all the extra shit you need. Thing is my boss latched on to me saying that and kept bringing it up, and recently he wanted me to get a licence with him in public water systems that he would pay for, cool, but I was miserable and didn't want to owe him anything if I left so I said no.

That is when he brought up if I saw this as a career or just a job, now, mind you this is the type of guy that can be spiteful, so I had to make a choice on the spot and either lie to make sure I was still put on jobs or tell the truth and not screw myself out of recommendations, I would like SOMETHING to put on my resume, so I told him it was a job.

Now this morning, I get a text in a group chat that I wasn't needed today, and I kinda felt like he was trying to do the same last week, but me and my coworkers wiggled me out of it each time, I'm sure my coworkers will get me some work, cause they some bros, but it'll be by twisting my bosses arm and if I'm coming in, it'll probably be for necessity.

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This is my love letter to the corporate world. I would like to share it as a way to vent:

Dear employers,

I do not have a job.

I do not want a job.

I want to work, and I want my expenses paid for, but I do not want to spend a single second going through the parasitic, disrespectful, abusive process to apply for a job and work for a company.

Allow me to walk you through the typical process to apply for a job, as you may be unaware:

The first step is to create a résumé. In order to even be considered for most positions, the résumé must use what is officially called "corporate jargon." However, "corporate bullshit" is a more fitting name. It's a style of language used by corporations in an attempt to sound professional, but instead it makes the text convoluted, wards off any applicants with an ounce of self respect, and sounds downright disgusting, pompous, and inhumane.

Let's look at an example. I've noticed "thrives in a fast-paced environment" is an extremely common phrase that appears in job listings. People assume it means "enjoys working at an exciting and eventful job," but what it actually means is that you are constantly rushed, hassled by managers, no time for breaks to collect yourself or fix pressing issues, and constant pressure and stress. That is not a healthy job, so advertising it as such is slimy and deceptive.

That same corporate bullshit is the language most employers expect to inject into each résumé in order to even be considered for the role. You can imagine the kind of people that attracts for the position.

After the résumé has been botoxed with the most vile language possible, the résumé must include a plethora of personal information. That includes a full name, phone number, email, home address, job history with references (which includes the personal information of other people), the name of every academic institution you attended, and much more.

If that information fell into the wrong hands, the ramifications would be catastrophic. Many job applications ask for things as detailed as your social security number before you're even considered for the position, and you're handing that along with your résumé to complete strangers. You're also trusting all of those strangers not to mishandle that information by carelessly throwing it away before shredding it or abuse that information themselves. Anyone could use that to commit identity theft, stalk you, or rob you.

Given how many jobs people apply for before they are accepted, it would be completely natural to feel uncomfortable handing out that personal information. Unfortunately, some jobs will only seek out applicants that post their résumé on services like Indeed or LinkedIn.

Speaking of which, both Indeed and LinkedIn collect and sell all personal information about its users. Anyone can and do buy that information. They explicitly state this in their privacy policy:

LinkedIn: "We will share your personal data with our Affiliates to provide and develop our Services." (https://www.linkedin.com/legal/privacy-policy#share 3.4 Related Services)

Indeed: "We collect personal data for research purposes to improve our products and services, understand user behavior and enhance user experience. Types of data collected varies with the specific study being performed but may include: First name, Last name, Gender, Age, Email address, Telephone number, Home address, IP address, Account ID's" (https://hrtechprivacy.com/brands/indeed#Data-collection-and-use Additional Purposes and Disclosures of Information)

Using those services breaches your personal information, plain and simple. People like myself will use those services to view jobs only, and apply outside of those sites (such as in person). Unfortunately, many jobs fail to include their address in the listing or are remote only.

I once found a listing for an IT job in my area. I visited the address on the job listing, and discovered that it was the address of a (rightfully) very confused man who had no idea about the job listing. Had I applied online instead of in person, my information most certainly would have been mishandled.

Many of the jobs I attempt to apply for in person all say "everything's online," and see no issue with that. Many jobs hiring for cybersecurity positions get suspicious if you show that you care about privacy. If someone doesn't even protect their own personal information, what makes you think they would be good at protecting yours as a career?

The next issue with job listings is the outrageous requirements. I have met brilliant individuals who would excel in their fields, yet struggle to find a job because they have no formal education, certifications costing hundreds of dollars each, or prior experience. Employers don't even give them a chance to demonstrate their knowledge.

Sometimes, employers will deny an applicant for being "overqualified." Instead of treating the applicant like a professional and valuing their experience and work, the applicant is flat out denied for the position. If the applicant tries to downplay their experience, they are instead "underqualified." Truthfulness is punished, and so the ones who make it through the application process lack integrity and honesty.

If an applicant finally manages to get an interview in person, the interview process is just as egregious as the application process. The ones in charge of hiring often know nothing about the position they are hiring for, so instead base their judgments entirely off of social and communication skills, which includes corporate jargon. Many of the questions asked during interviews are useless and have a hidden agenda. Applicants are expected to "study" these questions as if the interview is an exam. These questions rarely ever test the applicant's ability in the role.

Employers expect applicants not to waste their time, but will have no problem wasting applicants' time. If an applicant is anything but perfect, most employers will cease communication with the applicant without prior notice. From the applicant's point of view, he or she is waiting for a response from an employer before applying for the next job. The applicant does not want to apply for another job if it isn't necessary, because that takes time, effort, and personal information should be shared sparingly. Ghosting applicants is incredibly rude and egocentric.

If an applicant is approved for the role, many businesses will treat them like criminals by exposing them to scrutiny and unwanted investigation such as drug tests, social media stalking, etc. These practices are invasive, undermining, and belittling. People should be treated with trust and kindness, instead of distrust and judgment. Refusing any of these practices will get the applicant denied for the position.

There are numerous security and privacy concerns with telephony, email, banks, and others, most of which businesses refuse to accommodate. Corporations also include plenty of surveillance such as monitoring software, surveillance cameras, and other technology that harms work ethic and mental health through effects such as the Hawthorne effect.

With all of this in mind, the pure, experienced, honest, respectful people are punished and denied by employers every step of the way. What ends up happening is that people either become desperate enough to bend over to these malpractices, earn a low paying but ethical job at a small business, or end up without a job altogether. This needs to stop, and preventing it is not hard at all. Here are a few ideas to get you started:

  • Use normal, human language.
  • Post job listings on local job boards.
  • Encourage people to apply in person by removing any online applications.
  • Discourage résumés or responsibly handle all personal information you receive.
  • Put those who know the position best in charge of hiring for that position.
  • Give every applicant a chance to demonstrate their skills without judging a book by its cover.
  • Communicate using secure platforms such as face-to-face, Signal, SimpleX Chat, and others.
  • Give people the benefit of the doubt, and only take action if there is reasonable suspicion.
  • Treat your employees with the privacy and respect they deserve.

Be the change that needs to happen in the world.

Sincerely,

Anonymous

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Hey everyone, I came across an interesting part-time opportunity via Mercor, a San Francisco–based AI talent platform that partners with top AI startups.

They’re looking for a Chinese Linguistic Expert to help improve how AI models (like Gemini and similar tools) interpret Chinese prompts when generating images and videos.

It’s a mix of language, culture, and generative AI — perfect if you’re into how AI systems understand and visualize text-based inputs.

What you’ll do

Review AI-generated images and videos based on Chinese prompts.

Check for accuracy, fluency, and cultural alignment.

Provide linguistic & cultural feedback to improve model behavior.

Experiment with multimodal AI systems to find quirks and edge cases.

Work asynchronously with AI researchers and technical teams.

Who they’re looking for

Fluent in Mandarin Chinese and English.

Deep understanding of Chinese culture, idioms, and media.

Interested in AI and linguistic interpretation.

Bonus: experience with translation, localization, or content review.

Job details

💼 Start: Immediate

⏱ Duration: 5 weeks (possible extension)

🕓 Commitment: 10+ hrs/week, flexible schedule

🌍 Fully remote & asynchronous

💰 Pay: $28–$33 USD/hr (paid weekly via Stripe)

⚖️ Type: Independent contractor

About Mercor

Mercor connects global experts with leading AI companies. They’re backed by Benchmark, General Catalyst, Adam D’Angelo, Larry Summers, and Jack Dorsey.

If this sounds like something you’d enjoy, here’s the job post link: 👉 Apply here via Mercor

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Hey, I came across a Platform Engineer opening at a company called Mercor and thought it might be worth sharing for anyone into infra / distributed systems.

They’re working on AI models that help automate hiring — apparently used by some of the big AI labs. The role is focused on building and maintaining internal platforms: APIs, messaging, workflows, observability, and debugging across distributed systems. It’s a pretty solid mix of Python + Go and deep infrastructure work.

The position is based in San Francisco (seems remote-flexible), and the team looks quite strong technically.

If you’re into building reliable backend systems that other engineers depend on, this one might be up your alley.

click below link to apply

work.mercor.com/jobs/list_AAABmM9Ufaa3R7c69t1Naqgf?referralCode=948a086e-c9b4-4b27-8c19-ec3770a89100

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especially in Europe or canada

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Getting a Job in Tech in Italy in 2025: The Complete Guide

Italy's tech market is booming in 2025, with the ICT sector hitting €91.7 billion and over 70,000 annual job openings. Entry-level software developers earn €35,000+, while experienced roles top €60,000. Key hubs like Milan, Rome, and Turin offer competitive salaries (€40K–€70K+) amid growing demand for AI, cybersecurity, and cloud skills.

@jobs

nucamp.co/blog/coding-bootcamp…

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I'm from a less fortunate country, looking to move to EU (or Aussie).

Been looking around and all the job posts I see requires that I'd already been living in their city. This is not feasible for me as I'd need visa, which would need company sponsorship.

Any advice?

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I have a flip phone that I prefer to keep it always off with the battery removed - due to privacy reasons. I also have a text-only VOIP number (couldn't find a service that accepted Monero and had calling functionality) and an email.

I've been looking for jobs and I've put my VOIP number (mentioning that it's text-only) and my email on my resume. However, I didn't put my flip phone's phone number on it. So, I've just been wondering, is this really going to affect my chances of getting an job?

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Right now, I am currently in the process of hunting for jobs (mostly minimum wage though). I am currently trying to write as many cover letters and resumes as I can, and I'm planning to go out on January 2nd to apply to as many positions as I can both in-person and online (if that's allowed).

How many resumes/cover letters do you think I'll need in order to actually get an interview and a job?

So far, I only have around 15 resumes/cover letters, but I try to tailor them.

Am I also legally allowed to apply both online and in-person to the same job position at about the same time in Ontario, Canada?

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Total of 6 years (my fault), graduated with honors. Can't get a job because I don't have experience. Countless applications out. Zero interviews.

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TL;DR job app asked me for the verification code proving I completed the questionnaire "in order to proceed". I completed it with a fake SSN and the verification code was 1234.

Try putting in 1234 if you encounter this.

This -- "Work Opportunity Tax Credit Questionnaire" -- came up when applying through one of the big job search sites in the U.S. Turned out this was posted by a corporate staffing agency. Not the biggest one.

The Questionnaire asks for PII including social security number, name and address.

You are not required to do this, despite their absurd web form that states "optional field is required" or some shit. In my case, they wouldn't get any tax credits anyways

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Hello there!
Hope you're having a good day.
I also hope that this isn't against the community rules, and if it is, I'm really sorry. I thought it might be of interest to the users who are browsing this community.

I have made a new community called !Cryptolancing@Lemmy.wtf, to create a marketplace for jobs here on Lemmy, that works in a decentralized and user-centric way.

I'd love to see your posts there if there's anything that you can share with the rest of the Lemmy community! :)
Whether it's a post about the new position that you have available, your cool new project that needs a helping hand, or your awesome skills that you want to share with the world!

Thank you for reading, and again, have a good day!

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The [International] tag is meant to be broadly inclusive, for those wondering, as I'm interested in this subject from all nationalities/continents. I'm guessing the methods may be somewhat similar, but never know how they might be better elsewhere till you ask!

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cross-posted from: https://lemmy.world/post/10262952

In September 2022, the World Bank updated the International Poverty Line (IPL), a global absolute minimum, to $2.15 per day (in PPP). In addition, as of 2022, $3.65 per day in PPP for lower-middle income countries, and $6.85 per day in PPP for upper-middle income countries

this means the farmers in gujrat are living on upper middle range now! (555 inrs per day = 6.67 United States Dollars per day)

YIPEE

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Is anyone else seeing this message? It was 300 characters before and now it's 200, it's incredibly difficult to write a message with so few characters.

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submitted 2 years ago* (last edited 2 years ago) by tdawg@lemmy.world to c/jobs@lemmy.world
 
 

Hi everyone.

For context I'm a software engineer who lives in America.

I've been job hunting for a couple of weeks now and have started to land some intro calls. The first one went great and ended up lasting nearly an hour.

Unfortunately this post isn't about the intro call I had that went well. This other one seemed to have the exact opposite response. The person interviewing me was UK based (so maybe there's some kind of cultural difference?

But anyway basically what had happened was we started out being pretty casual and chatty. Talking about the weather (the usual). She asks why I'm looking for work I tell her the company isn't doing so great and we've already gone through a number of layoffs. She doesn't really have a response to this other than something about it "being smart to look now". She asks what kind of notice I would need to give and I tell her the standard 2 weeks is fine given the situation at the company.

She asks me some questions about my skills and then I ask her if she wants a rundown of the projects I've worked on and my role in them at my current job. She obliged so I go into a high level on each on. The product, the client's buisness, and some high level architecture to (hopefully) hit the buzzwords she's looking for. I even hedge a little bit here and apologize for talking her ear off, but she confirms it's all good stuff.

Anyway, she asks if I'm okay with the salary range on the listing and asks what I'm looking for next. I give her some blurb about how I've been getting more and more into data modeling and architecture so I'd like to continue that route. (She doesn't really say anything). Then she pivots totally and asks if I'm self taught and wants to know my story (seemingly interested). I give her the normal story about being a struggling worker shortly after graduation and this that and the other thing. She tells me she thinks it's fascinating to learn everyone's different perspectives. (Which imo is a green flag right?)

But then at that point she's like "alright. Thanks for your time. It was nice talking with you. I'll speak with the team and see what they think. Get back to you Monday?" So obviously I'm a little shocked at the abrupt ending (it has been a total of 15 minutes) but I echo her words and we wave good bye. (She didn't even ask me if I had questions!)

SUMMARY: the meeting felt very short and had a lot less chit-chat than I'm use to. If they were American I would mark the interview down as a failure, but I wanted to ask here if anyone has experience interviewing with a British company? Am I missing something? Should I have focused less on the projects? Is there some British social norm I'm not aware of? 15 minutes feels painfully short even for an HR call

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Some jobs suck because they’re just not what you want to be doing; others suck because the workplace culture itself is a mess. It can be hard to tell if your workplace is toxic or if you just really hate it for your own reasons, but there are ways to parse it out. What every workplace should have

Per the U.S. Surgeon General, for optimal worker mental health and well-being, a workplace must have these five essentials:

  • Protection from harm, both physical and mental: This means workplaces provide support that focuses on mental health, give you enough time to rest, prioritize your safety on the job, and make the environment safe and welcoming for everyone.
  • Connection and community: A workplace should create inclusive cultures that enable workers to form trusting relationships and collaborate with one another.
  • Work-life harmony: Workplaces with work-life harmony give employees some autonomy over how work is completed, offer flexible and predictable schedules, and respect the boundary between on- and off-hours. They also provide paid leave.
  • A feeling of mattering at work: Employees should feel like they matter at their job, not like they’re just disposable laborers. To do this, companies should offer a living wage, involve workers in decisions, and recognize good work.
  • Opportunities for growth: Finally, employees will have better well-being if they’re given opportunities to grow in their careers, whether through training and education or mentoring. There should be clear, equitable pathways for advancement laid out and feedback given on work.

The Surgeon General came up with this framework after some grim statistics came from the pandemic: 76% of U.S. workers reported at least one mental health condition symptom in 2021, which was up 17% from two years prior, and 84% said they had encountered at least one factor in their workplace that had a negative impact on their mental health. How your job stacks up

The five essentials are a great framework from which you can inspect your own company. If it provides safety, connection, work-life harmony, a feeling that you matter, and opportunities for growth, it’s meeting the benchmarks of not being toxic—but if you still dislike it or feel it draining you, it might be time to switch jobs.

You don’t have to wait around for the right gig to fall in your lap. Research companies in your chosen field that meet those five requirements (Glassdoor and other employee review sites are great for this) and then send them a letter of interest. During any interviews, keep the five requirements top of mind and ask direct questions about how any potential new employer meets them. source

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