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cover of episode TNB Tech Minute: Google Drops DEI Targets, Following Silicon Valley Trend

TNB Tech Minute: Google Drops DEI Targets, Following Silicon Valley Trend

2025/2/5
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WSJ Tech News Briefing

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Pierre Bien-Aimé: 今天我独家报道,谷歌正在取消增加少数族裔员工的招聘目标。公司在今天发给员工的邮件中表示,将不再设定招聘目标来改善员工队伍的代表性。鉴于最近的法院判决和特朗普总统旨在限制政府和联邦承包商DEI的行政命令,谷歌也在审查一些多元化、公平和包容项目。这一举动是硅谷普遍撤退的一部分。不过,公司表示将维持其针对弱势员工的资源小组,以提供支持和帮助。

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Here's your TNV Tech Minute for Wednesday, February 5th. I'm Pierre Bien-Aimé for The Wall Street Journal.

We're exclusively reporting that Google is eliminating goals to hire more minority employees. In an email to employees today, the company said it would no longer set hiring targets to improve representation in its workforce. It's also reviewing some diversity, equity, and inclusion programs in light of recent court decisions and executive orders by President Trump aimed at curbing DEI in the government and federal contractors. Google's moves are part of a pullback across Silicon Valley.

The company said it would maintain its resource groups for underrepresented employees.

Wall Street is clamoring to get a piece of X. According to people familiar with the matter, banks wrapped up the sale of $5.5 billion in debt backed by Elon Musk's social media company today. Investors, including PIMCO and Citadel, agreed to buy the loans at 97 cents on the dollar. The floating rate debts carry an interest rate of about 11%, with borrowing costs several percentage points above even the riskiest loans on Wall Street.

The sale shows that investors are eager to bet on Musk, given his proximity to President Trump. At a meeting with potential investors last week, X reported 2024 adjusted earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization of about $1.25 billion and annual revenue of $2.7 billion.

And Uber stock fell after the company reported lower-than-expected operating income. In the December quarter, operating income rose from a year earlier to $770 million, but significantly undershot the roughly $1.2 billion analysts had expected.

Uber also highlighted preparations for the arrival of robo-taxis. The adoption of Waymo self-driving cars in cities like San Francisco and Tesla's robo-taxi plans have investors pondering whether the technology poses a threat or an opportunity for Uber. The company's share price fell about 7.5%. For a deeper dive into what's happening in tech, check out Thursday's Tech News Briefing podcast.