Pinterest has dismissed two engineers after they created and shared a software tool that identified colleagues who had been made redundant during a recent round of job cuts, according to reports.
The digital pinboard company announced earlier this month that it would cut about 15 per cent of its workforce, roughly 700 roles, as chief executive Bill Ready said the business was “doubling down on an AI-forward approach”. Pinterest did not disclose which teams would be affected by the reductions.
Following the announcement, two engineers wrote custom scripts that accessed internal systems to flag when employee accounts were deactivated, effectively revealing the names and locations of staff who had lost their jobs. The information was then shared more widely, prompting the company to take disciplinary action.
A Pinterest spokesperson said the engineers had “improperly accessed confidential company information” and described the actions as a clear breach of company policy and a violation of affected employees’ privacy. It remains unclear whether the data was shared solely with colleagues inside the business or beyond the company.
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