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Home / Business and Economy / TikTok Fires UK Moderators Amid Union Busting Claims

TikTok Fires UK Moderators Amid Union Busting Claims

16 Jan

•

Summary

  • Hundreds of UK moderators were fired before Christmas.
  • Moderators allege unfair dismissal and union busting tactics.
  • TikTok claims sackings were part of global restructuring.
TikTok Fires UK Moderators Amid Union Busting Claims

TikTok moderators in the UK have accused the social media company of "oppressive and intimidating" union busting, alleging unfair dismissal after hundreds were fired shortly before a planned union vote. These workers sought to establish a collective bargaining unit to address the severe personal costs associated with reviewing extreme and violent content.

Approximately 400 moderators in London were dismissed before Christmas, a process initiated just a week before the union vote was scheduled. TikTok, with a significant user base in Britain, strongly denies the legal claims lodged with an employment tribunal, calling them "baseless." The company attributes the sackings to a global restructuring and the increased use of AI for content moderation.

Supporters of the moderators contend that TikTok is prioritizing union busting over user safety and worker well-being. They argue that content moderation is a dangerous and underpaid job requiring more resources. TikTok maintains that technological advancements have significantly reduced moderators' exposure to graphic material.

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Disclaimer: This story has been auto-aggregated and auto-summarised by a computer program. This story has not been edited or created by the Feedzop team.
TikTok stated the firings were part of a global restructuring and increased AI automation in content moderation. However, moderators claim it was an act of union busting before a union vote.
Moderators accuse TikTok of unfair dismissal, union busting, and creating an "oppressive and intimidating" work environment, violating trade union laws.
Around 400 content moderators in London were fired before Christmas as part of the restructuring initiated by TikTok.

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