US banking giant Wells Fargo has sacked a number of employees following claims that staff were faking keyboard activity to fool the company into thinking they were working when they were not.

It is not yet clear how the issue was discovered or whether it was specifically related to people working from home.

The US bank said staff had been fired or resigned “after review of allegations involving simulation of keyboard activity creating impression of active work”.

New rules recently came into effect in the US which mean that brokers working from home must be inspected every three years.

  • Holy shit, I couldn’t have said it better.

    “Butts in seats” is a hold-over from the industrial revolution, when productivity was measured by how many times a day you pulled the lever that made the widget. It’s a stupid metric for most white-collar jobs.

    A good manager will have measurable metrics for performance that they’ve approved with their leaders. If an employee is meeting those objective metrics, they’re doing their job. If they’re meeting those objectives while climbing Half Dome, who the fuck cares? If they’re meeting those objectives by running everything through ChatGPT, well, maybe you need to re-evaluate whether you need those employees or if those jobs could be done by an LLM.

    The idea that how many hours an employee works is a useful measure of success, of productivity, is inane and thoughtless, and any leader who thinks it is is unqualified for their job.

    Fuck, if a burger-flipper figures out how to flip the number of burgers with the right quality without standing at the grill, it is absurd, irresponsible, and downright idiotic to insist that part of the job is physically standing in front of the grill. Likely, said employee has just put an entire workforce out of jobs and not benefited themselves, but the point stands.

    Keyboard loggers, mouse movement trackers, web cam monitors: they’re all tools of incompetent managers who should be fired, all the way up the chain to the person who approved their use. Learn how to measure success, you fuckwits.

    • thesohoriots@lemmy.world
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      6 months ago

      Monitoring software effectively does middle management’s job, so they have to figure out how to justify themselves. Hence the return to office mandates, etc., instead of strapping a vibrator to your mouse for the afternoon and getting your 8 hours of performative busywork done in the 3 productive hours it actually takes.

    • Soup@lemmy.world
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      6 months ago

      When two workers started working from home I heard a manager say “how am I supposed to know they’re getting work done?” as if he couldn’t see the results all appear on the server. And he never even really spoke to them when they were in the office anyway! Meanwhile I’m a “hard worker” while in my office watching four hours of Critical Role a day bored out of my skull because I finished all the work already. I tried to get more to do but my direct manager/senior coworker was too paranoid to let me touch anything else even though he was insanely overworked.

      Oh and the dipshit manager spent at least an hour if his day talking conservative nonsense with another employee. Like, bro, get a fucking clue.

    • brianorca@lemmy.world
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      6 months ago

      Of course lots of Wells Fargo previous PR disasters resulted from having meaningful metrics from management that just happened to be anti-consumer side effects.

      • Wells Fargo (and Boeing) largely illustrate Goodhart’s Law; they don’t use metrics correctly. But more than anything else, those companies are demonstrations of the risk of having only one metric that supersedes all others: short-term profit.

        The fact that a company uses metrics doesn’t prove they’re doing the right thing. They have to use good metrics well, have good practices and processes around metrics, understand them, and not using them as targets. Wells Fargo’s troubles mainly stemmed from violating Goodhart’s Law.

        • brianorca@lemmy.world
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          6 months ago

          True, having the right metric is important. But having no metric might be an overreaction to the crisis caused by bad metrics.