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Recent Editions
Human Times
North America
A federal judge has ruled that Tesla must face trial over allegations of discrimination against American citizens in its hiring practices. U.S. District Judge Vince Chhabria in San Francisco refused to dismiss a lawsuit accusing the carmaker of systematically discriminating against U.S. citizens in hiring by preferring H-1B visa holders who will do the same job for less pay. The plaintiff is a software engineer who alleges Tesla passed him over for an engineering role as part of a deliberate and systemic preference for foreign workers. Chhabria said the plaintiff had presented “just enough facts” about Tesla’s hiring practices for the proposed class action to proceed, while noting he was “somewhat skeptical” the case would ultimately succeed.
Full Issue
Human Times
UK
Swiss food giant Nestlé is overhauling its bonus system to reward top performers. The company is introducing six rankings for its employees to determine payouts. Employees deemed "exemplary" will be eligible for a payout of as much as 150% of the bonus target. Those employees given an "unsatisfactory" rating will receive between 0% and 50% of the target. Bonus targets vary across teams. Nestlé said the system simplifies performance evaluation, development planning and employee feedback. A Nestlé spokesperson said: “The idea behind the whole framework is to really develop people. We also want to change how people behave.”
Full Issue
Human Times
Europe
Swiss food giant Nestlé is overhauling its bonus system to reward top performers. The company is introducing six rankings for its employees to determine payouts. Employees deemed "exemplary" will be eligible for a payout of as much as 150% of the bonus target. Those employees given an "unsatisfactory" rating will receive between 0% and 50% of the target. Bonus targets vary across teams. Nestlé said the system simplifies performance evaluation, development planning and employee feedback. A Nestlé spokesperson said: “The idea behind the whole framework is to really develop people. We also want to change how people behave.”
Full Issue
Human Times
Middle East
G42, the Abu Dhabi-based technology firm, has announced the recruitment of AI agents for enterprise roles. The application process is open for agents that can deliver measurable value within approved infrastructure. Successful candidates will undergo a probationary phase to assess their performance. Maymee Kurian, group chief augmented human capital officer at G42, said: “The future of work is being shaped by how intelligently we design the relationship between human talent and intelligent systems. This initiative is not about deploying AI for incremental gains, but about rethinking enterprise workforce design for the AI era. By welcoming AI agents into structured roles, we are augmenting execution capacity while allowing our people to focus on leadership, innovation, and strategic outcomes . . . Our approach ensures that AI operates within clear governance, measurable performance standards, and strong human accountability, enabling us to scale responsibly while continuing to invest in the growth and capability of our workforce.”
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