Let’s immediately acknowledge that the title is lighthearted, and that “communist company” is an oxymoron. The better choice would’ve been, “which is the most worker-owned, egalitarian, power-structures-free cooperative?”, which SEO experts told me was too long of a title. With that said, let me tell you about Igalia and other tech cooperatives

  • Cowbee [he/they]@lemmy.ml
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    9 months ago

    Yea, agree with the description for this post. This is an example of a worker cooperative, which is certainly a form of business that usually is much better for the workers involved, but calling it Communist is certainly a stretch, as Communism is more about full public ownership of an economy than it is carving a niche out of a broader Capitalist system. Not saying it’s bad! Just that the title is definitely toungue-in-cheek, if I’m going to be annoyingly nitpicky.

  • fubarx@lemmy.world
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    9 months ago

    Wonder:

    • How do they handle someone who may not be performing as well as others?
    • What’s the process for conflict resolution? Both professional and inter-personal.
    • Not sure if they’ve been through a big global recession yet. That’s usually when companies and their policies get tested.

    Not to take away from their unique model. Just curious how the idealism handles the messy parts of human nature.

  • Daniel Quinn@lemmy.ca
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    9 months ago

    Fascinating! Thanks for sharing. I’m not sure I’d be happy in a fully remote role where you’ve got hundreds of employees voting on how you build stuff, but I know that there are lots of people who dig this pattern, and they’re clearly doing Good work.