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From HR leadership to diversity and inclusion, hybrid working, organisational data, performance management, and retention strategies, Human Times is the only trusted free online news source dedicated to covering the most up to date headlines, articles, reports and interviews to make sure you’re abreast of changes in the HR industry.

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Recent Editions
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Human Times
North America
Meta to pause internal mouse-tracking tech

Meta is pausing an internal program that tracks ​employee mouse movements and digital activity for AI training amid reports that sensitive employee data, intended to monitor digital interactions within Meta's internal systems, was accessible to all Meta ​workers. "We have carefully designed this program ​with privacy safeguards and while we have no indication at this time that ​any data was improperly accessed by Meta employees, we're pausing it while we investigate," said Meta spokesperson Tracy Clayton. The tool - Model Capability Initiative (MCI) - was launched in April.

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Human Times
UK
Revolut scraps ‘remote-first’ working for graduate hires

London-headquartered fintech Revolut will require its graduate employees to work from the office for the majority of the week in a shift away from a long-championed “remote-first” approach. Meanwhile, The Times reports that, in France, Airbus is facing potential strike action as it plans to increase on-site working days for white-collar staff from three to four per week. Chief Executive Guillaume Faury said the change aims to enhance performance and quality. The CGT union said its concerns include overcrowding in facilities and disruptions to personal lives. A union notice urged those rallying to "voice their anger and debate right under G. Faury's windows!"

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Human Times
Europe
Workers should get cooling breaks, unions tell EU

The European Trade Union Confederation (ETUC) has said European workers should be allowed "cooling breaks" - just like World Cup footballers - on sweltering summer days. "The cooling breaks being used at the World Cup have put the spotlight on the danger posed to workers by extreme heat and the kind of measures that can be taken to keep people safe," ETUC General Secretary Esther Lynch said. "Builders, fruit pickers or bus drivers need a lot longer than three minutes to recover, but [the World Cup] is a good example of how work can be adapted to the changing climate." The lobby group wants the European Commission to grant workers a "right to breaks without loss of pay" when temperatures are high.

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Human Times
Middle East
Dubai announces flexible summer working hours for government employees

Dubai's Human Resources Department has introduced 'Our Flexible Summer' initiative for 2026, allowing government employees to choose between two working models. From 29 June to 10 September, employees can work seven hours daily from Monday to Thursday and four and a half hours on Friday, or eight hours from Monday to Thursday with Friday off. Abdullah Ali bin Zayed Al Falasi, Director General of DGHR, said: "Employee wellbeing and quality of life do not come at the expense of performance." 

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