The title is not entirely correct. The employee got logged out and locked out of everything. It's a sign of well integrated IT that this happened at the same time.
Ignoring the motivation and all the context around the lay-offs, it's probably the best way if you're going to piss of hundreds of people with access to various bits of the system.
It's the opposite of what you describe if people lose access before they get the ominous email it looks like a half ass unprofessional IT department that can't even do scheduling right.
No, it's how things happen in big corps. You lose access to everything. Any follow up is done via external communication, because you're not an employee anymore. You can't send emails as an employee or access old correspondence.
There was an announcement posted somewhere else that the Twitter employees got: either you get an internal email that you're staying, or an external/private one that you're gone.
They lost access and knew they got fired over 4 hours before the mails arrived. It's amateur and rushed nothing more. Most big corps at least have the deceny to pretend some services are in maintenance before mass layoffs... but decency and compassion are hard to find on hackernews right now survivorship bias is running hot.
5 comments
[ 4.5 ms ] story [ 24.6 ms ] threadI will let myself out
Ignoring the motivation and all the context around the lay-offs, it's probably the best way if you're going to piss of hundreds of people with access to various bits of the system.
There was an announcement posted somewhere else that the Twitter employees got: either you get an internal email that you're staying, or an external/private one that you're gone.