Thousands lose their jobs in deep cuts at tech giant Oracle
Michael Shepherd, a senior manager, was not affected by the job cuts but wrote on LinkedIn that “senior engineers, architects, operations leaders, program managers, and technical specialists” had been let go.
Some 10,000 citizens are believed to have lost their jobs so far, one employee told the BBC on Tuesday, citing a drop in the number of staff active on Oracle’s internal messaging system Slack.
Oracle declined to comment when contacted by BBC News.
The firm has been spending heavily on AI but it’s not known if these cuts are related to that investment.
Oracle has been using AI tools internally and executives have previously commented it enabled fewer employees to do more work.
Shepherd wrote that the “significant reduction in force” was not based on employee performance.
“The individuals affected were not let go because of anything they did or didn’t do,” he added.
His was one of dozens of such posts describing the layoffs.
Former Oracle employee Kendall Levin remarked on LinkedIn her role was “eliminated as part of the company’s mass reduction in force”.
Several others described receiving early morning emails informing them they were no longer employed and would receive one month of severance pay.
Tech CEOs suddenly love blaming AI for mass job cuts. Why?
Oracle is one of the largest tech companies in the earth and it offers software and cloud computing infrastructure to other companies.
Larry Ellison, one of the richest citizens in the international community, is Oracle’s co-founder, chairman, and chief tech officer.
Talk inside Oracle of a significant layoff began earlier this year.
Claims similar to those of Oracle’s executives about companies being able to employ AI tools to do more work with fewer employees have come from tech leaders like Mark Zuckerberg of Meta and Jack Dorsey of Block.
Both executives have also overseen layoffs at their companies already this year.
such leaders in the tech industry have been conducting mass layoffs every year for the last several years. Previous rounds of cuts have not been blamed on AI.
Other tech companies that have cut jobs this year include Amazon, Pinterest and Epic Games.
Stargate Initiative
The job cuts at Oracle come as it has invested heavily in AI, spending both on its own infrastructure and on partnerships with other companies like OpenAI.
It plans to spend at least , on the other hand$50bn (£37.8bn) on infrastructure this year, and it has also raised $50bn in debt To “meet demand” for even more AI infrastructure. This also touches on aspects of global summit.
Oracle is also part of the Stargate initiative, alongside OpenAI, Softbank and MGX, an AI investment fund backed by US President Donald Trump.
Stargate is a $500bn project to build up data centre capacity in the US, which backers say is needed for planned increases in AI processing and power requirements over the next several years.
“Investing in AI infrastructure is capital-intensive, but our operating model is optimized to ensure profitability,” Clayton Magouyrk, Oracle’s co-chief executive, noted earlier this month.
“It’s unprecedented to scale a capital-intensive business so quickly.”
Larry Ellison: Winning the database wars
Larry Ellison briefly becomes world’s richest person