extremely online #3: kickstarter union says workers were fired for striking, tech accountability events and more

TL;DR: This is Extremely Online, a tech accountability round-up by Julie Lee. It's for people who care about tech and AI accountability, bringing you original content, upcoming events and job and funding opportunities. 

New here? I'm an investigative data journalist that writes about tech and AI. I have been a Technology Fellow at the ACLU of Massachusetts, research intern at the Surveillance Technology Oversight Project and Public Voices Fellow on Technology in the Public Interest. I’ve written stories on how civil asset forfeiture funded robot police dogs, the largest analysis to date of ShotSpotter’s efficacy in Boston, Kickstarter United’s historic fight for a four day work week, and that sad time Evernote killed its free tier. I've also worked on projects about Flock, automated license plate readers and location data brokers that haven't made it onto the internet but that I'm hoping can inform future editions. Oh yeah, and I have a Ph.D. in neuroscience, for some reason.

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Kickstarter workers and supporters at a rally during their strike last fall. (Credit: Julie Lee)

In October, I reported on a historic strike by Kickstarter United, the union for employees at the crowdfunding platform Kickstarter. After months of contract negotiations, Kickstarter workers went on strike, fighting to win a higher salary floor and to become the first union to codify their four-day workweek in their contract. It wasn’t the first time the union tried to make history: in 2020, workers at Kickstarter became the first modern tech company to unionize.

After 42 days on strike (a record for the industry), the union declared victory. Things had been quiet since, until last week, when the union announced on social media that “four union members have been laid off or forced to leave our union by leadership,” writing that it was retaliation for the strike. I had to follow up.

Kickstarter Employees Fired In Retaliation for Strike, Union Says

At least seven unionized Kickstarter employees were told in early February that their roles were eliminated as part of a restructuring effort, a move that the union claimed was in retaliation for a strike last fall. 

Four unionized employees were terminated and another three were offered roles outside of the union. Another employee, who was in a non-union role, was moved to a role within the union. Otherwise, the only employees affected were union members. As labor unions have become more popular in the tech industry, the terminations were viewed by the union as a means to chill worker organizing. 

“A lot of folks feel like this is a direct result of our strike,” said one of the affected employees, who requested anonymity.

In October, unionized employees at Kickstarter went on strike over stalled negotiations for their latest contract. Among other demands, the union sought to codify their four-day workweek in their contract, a first for the industry. The strike ended in November after a record 42 days, with the union announcing it had won strong protections for their four-day workweek and a higher salary floor tied to cost of living. It was the longest strike to date amid a new wave of tech worker unions, after a weeklong strike by the New York Times Tech Guild in November 2024.

Three months later, Kickstarter eliminated the roles of at least seven employees who participated in the strike. The move was described as a “restructure” due to “changes to the organization,” rather than tied to performance or financial issues, said union members. In fact, the terminated employees had excellent performance and some were essential to the success of Kickstarter, said Dannel Jurado, a senior software engineer at Kickstarter and union steward who is representing two of the terminated workers in grievances between the union and company. “The union is operating on this being retaliation,” said Jurado. 

Kickstarter CEO Everette Taylor and vice president of people Tarveen Forrester did not reply to multiple requests for comment.

In 2020, Kickstarter became the first modern tech company to unionize. During the unionization effort, the company fired two employees who were active in the campaign, Taylor Moore and Clarissa Redwine. The union claimed the terminations were retaliatory and filed two charges with the National Labor Review Board. Kickstarter later settled with one of the workers for around $36,000 in backpay, but continued to deny that the terminations were linked to the employees’ union activity. 

Seth Goldstein is a labor attorney who represented Moore and Redwine in 2020. While Goldstein does not represent the recently terminated workers, he had strong words about any suggestion that Kickstarter’s actions were anything but retaliatory based on his experience with the company. 

“It’s bullsh-t,” said Goldstein. “They can’t accept the fact that the workers organized successfully.” 

The recent termination took place months after the end of the strike. Goldstein was not surprised. 

“If they did it right away, then it definitely would seem like retaliation,” he said. Jurado, the union steward, found the timing suspect. Annual bonuses are usually awarded in March, so the terminated workers will not get bonuses, he said. 

As for the employees offered non-union roles, union representatives viewed the decision as an attempt to reduce the size and strength of the bargaining unit. 

The union is pursuing grievances internally with the company and has filed two charges with the National Labor Relations Board (One charge is available online but the other has yet to be docketed.)

“No matter what happens, it’s important that we don’t just roll over,” said the affected employee.

Note: This article was originally published on Columbia News Service. Columbia News Service publishes the work of enrolled students at the Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism in New York City. For more stories, please visit www.columbianewsservice.com

You didn't think I'd forget about events, did you?
Disclaimer: Events, job postings, etc. are not endorsements!

February 26 (DC, virtual): Section 230 at 30: The Past, Present, and Future of Online Speech and the 26 Words That Created the Internet, Cato Institute

February 26 (Boston): New Civic Terrains: Smart as a City – The Politics of Test-Bed Urbanism, Northeastern University

February 26 (virtual): Mental Health Chatbots and the Future of Care, Data & Society

February 26 (virtual): Humanoid Robots: Breakthrough or Bubble?, Rest of World

February 27 (virtual): CODED BIAS 5th Anniversary Virtual Finale Event, Algorithmic Justice League

Job and funding opportunities

Data Science for Social Good Summer Fellowship, Johns Hopkins University

2026 Oxford AI and Media Policy Summer Institute, Oxford University

Democracy x AI Cohort, Mozilla Foundation

Executive Director, Calyx Institute

Solutions Technologist, Digital Investigations Lab, Human Rights Watch

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