The big boobs india punjabi women sex videoengineers building self-driving cars for Google had an unusual problem. They made so much money that they quit.
Google paid its staffers on Waymo, its self-driving car division, such huge salaries and bonuses that they had enough money to give up stable jobs at the tech company, Bloomberg reported.
The "unusual compensation system" was based on the success of Waymo, not Google itself. Employees' bonuses and equity were multiplied by as much as 16 in one case, Bloomberg said, putting employees' compensation in the multi-millions.
The system rewarded engineers for Waymo's success — even though Waymo has yet to produce an actual self-driving car. The division, however, did reach key milestones that prompted the multiplied bonuses.
The "f--- you money," as employees called it, was too much even for Google. Employees left to start Otto, the self-driving trucking company acquired by Uber, and Argo AI, which just got a $1 billion investment from Ford.
Newer employees won't have the same problem at Waymo. They're being paid on a more normal system, where their bonuses won't get multiplied by 16.
Topics Google Self-Driving Cars
(Editor: {typename type="name"/})
Apple TV will support Xbox and PlayStation controllers
The company that sells Snuggies just sued Amazon
The company that sells Snuggies just sued Amazon
Redditor claims MacBook Pro exploded during 'normal use'
Apple TV will support Xbox and PlayStation controllers
This device makes it super easy for thieves to steal your car
Chicago Bulls vs. Toronto Raptors 2024 livestream: Watch NBA online
Starbucks, late to the game, releases Pokémon Go Frappuccino
Babbel, Coursera, and MasterClass deals: Subscriptions on sale ahead of the new year
'When They See Us' review: Central Park Five miniseries is riveting
接受PR>=1、BR>=1,流量相当,内容相关类链接。