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<title>Remote IT Jobs | Find Remote Tech Jobs Worldwide</title>
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<description>Discover top remote IT jobs from leading tech companies. Search software development, DevOps, cybersecurity, and tech leadership positions. Apply to work-from-home tech jobs today.</description>
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<category>Bitcoin News</category>
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<title><![CDATA[Starbucks Tech Layoffs: What's Behind the Cuts and How It Impacts the Industry]]></title>
<link>https://www.remoteitjobs.app/article/starbucks-tech-layoffs-whats-behind-the-cuts-and-how-it-impacts-the-industry</link>
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<pubDate>Wed, 22 Apr 2026 12:15:19 GMT</pubDate>
<description><![CDATA[## Starbucks Cuts Jobs in Technology Teams
Starbucks is cutting staff in its technology organization, according to an internal communication sent to employees Tuesday.
Starbucks declined to share the exact number of layoffs or confirm whether they were Seattle-based roles.
The cuts, which had been rumored internally for several days, according to several employees, were part of the company’s **restructuring of its technology organization**, the company told employees in an internal message seen by The Seattle Times.
“We are making structural changes to move faster, sharpen focus, and ensure we are set up to deliver on our most important priorities,” the company said in the message.
The cuts were communicated to affected workers Tuesday and were not included in a separate announcement that some Seattle-based technology roles will move from Seattle to its planned office in Nashville, Tenn., which will eventually house up to 2,000 jobs.
In December, Anand Varadarajan joined Starbucks as its **chief technology officer** after 19 years at Amazon, where he was most recently in charge of its global grocery business.
According to the IT trade journal ETCIO, Varadarajan’s hiring “signal[s] a sharper focus on technology-led growth.”
Starbucks is in the midst of a major turnaround effort under CEO Brian Niccol, who was hired in 2024 to deal with lagging sales and profits, and operational problems at stores.
That has meant major investments in store upgrades and a planned expansion into markets where Starbucks isn’t prevalent.
But it has also meant major **cost-cutting**.
Last year, Starbucks closed several hundred stores in the U.S. and Canada, including more than 30 locations in Washington. It also laid off nearly 1,000 retail and nonretail workers in Seattle and Kent, along with 1,100 corporate employees, and more cuts are expected next month.]]></description>
<author>contact@remoteitjobs.app (RemoteITJobs.app)</author>
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<title><![CDATA[How AI is Revolutionizing Government Hiring and Permitting: Maryland's Game-Changing Approach]]></title>
<link>https://www.remoteitjobs.app/article/how-ai-is-revolutionizing-government-hiring-and-permitting-marylands-game-changing-approach</link>
<guid>how-ai-is-revolutionizing-government-hiring-and-permitting-marylands-game-changing-approach</guid>
<pubDate>Tue, 21 Apr 2026 19:15:18 GMT</pubDate>
<description><
*Illustration by Yan Wu/The Washington Post; iStock*]]></description>
<author>contact@remoteitjobs.app (RemoteITJobs.app)</author>
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<title><![CDATA[Rockefeller Foundation Bets $100M on AI Job Revolution: Can This Save American Workers?]]></title>
<link>https://www.remoteitjobs.app/article/rockefeller-foundation-bets-100m-on-ai-job-revolution-can-this-save-american-workers</link>
<guid>rockefeller-foundation-bets-100m-on-ai-job-revolution-can-this-save-american-workers</guid>
<pubDate>Tue, 21 Apr 2026 12:15:17 GMT</pubDate>
<description><![CDATA[## The $100 Million AI Jobs Initiative
The Rockefeller Foundation has announced an ambitious $100 million investment aimed at helping U.S. workers adapt to **tech-driven changes** in the labor market, with a particular focus on **AI disruption**. This exclusive initiative represents one of the largest private-sector responses to the growing challenges posed by artificial intelligence in the workplace.
## Why This Matters Now
**AI is already reshaping jobs** that local economies depend on, creating both opportunities and significant challenges for American workers. The speed at which artificial intelligence is transforming industries has created an urgent need for workforce adaptation strategies. Whether private-sector efforts like this can scale fast enough may help determine if the technology **widens or narrows American economic divides**.
## The "Big Bet on Good Jobs for America" Strategy
The three-year, $100 million commitment is part of the foundation's broader aim to create **1.6 million additional "good jobs"** nationally across 250 locations. The initiative will specifically target communities where people are at risk of falling out of work due to AI or where there's already been significant job loss.
Derek Kilmer, a former Democratic congressman from Washington who now serves as senior vice president at the Rockefeller Foundation, explained that "good jobs" include roles in sectors like **health care and food and nutrition** - areas that remain essential even as technology transforms other industries.
## How the Program Will Work
The Rockefeller Foundation will partner with **local groups and policymakers** to test new policies and programs, including:
- **Job training pathways** specifically designed for AI-impacted industries
- Expanded childcare access to remove barriers to workforce participation
- Easing credential requirements that may prevent qualified workers from accessing opportunities
- Covering upfront training costs for high-demand positions like health care jobs
Rather than pre-selecting all 250 locations, the foundation plans to start with a smaller group of about **20-30 communities** and then scale what works based on proven results. Locations will be targeted based on underlying conditions, including **labor market gaps and employer demand**.
## The AI Acceleration Challenge
"AI is accelerating economic disruption and sidelining working-age Americans from the labor market," Kilmer told Axios. "When we are at these moments of profound economic change, societies have a choice: either to help people in places adapt or absorb the consequences for decades."
Kilmer emphasized that some of the foundation's work focuses on how **AI can actually help** rather than just disrupt - for example, by speeding up permit processing for affordable housing buildouts, which creates construction jobs while addressing housing shortages.
## The Bigger Picture: Private vs. Public Response
It's increasingly looking like **private philanthropy and local efforts** will be quicker than the federal government to jump in with funding projects to help Americans with job loss and displacement. This $100 million initiative represents a significant bet that targeted, community-based approaches can effectively address the challenges of AI-driven labor market changes.
However, whether such efforts can **keep pace with the speed and scale** of labor market disruption remains an open question. The foundation's approach of starting small and scaling what works represents a pragmatic strategy, but the ultimate success will depend on whether these programs can be implemented quickly enough to make a meaningful difference for workers facing immediate AI-related challenges.]]></description>
<author>contact@remoteitjobs.app (RemoteITJobs.app)</author>
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<title><![CDATA[From Tech Royalty to Unemployable: The Shocking Reality for 1.2 Million Laid-Off Workers]]></title>
<link>https://www.remoteitjobs.app/article/from-tech-royalty-to-unemployable-the-shocking-reality-for-12-million-laid-off-workers</link>
<guid>from-tech-royalty-to-unemployable-the-shocking-reality-for-12-million-laid-off-workers</guid>
<pubDate>Mon, 20 Apr 2026 19:15:17 GMT</pubDate>
<description><
*Photo illustration by Slate. Photos by Getty Images Plus.*
## The Bloodbath Continues
The 2010s and early 2020s were the **golden era of tech**—aggressive hiring, generous salaries, and flowing perks defined the industry. The years since have been a never-ending bloodbath. **More than 1.2 million people have been laid off in tech since 2022**, according to TrueUp.Io. Because these are only the publicly reported layoffs, the number could be higher.
## From Heavily Recruited to Unemployable
Recruiters used to message me weekly, sometimes daily, a few years ago. The options were copious, the outlook optimistic. After enduring so much job insecurity early in my career, I thought I had made it. In the past year, though, I've applied to at least **100 roles** for which I was an excellent fit. I've secured referrals, used A.I. to customize my résumé and cover letter, openly shared on social media, and simply *persisted*.
But my job prospects have been bleak. I've interviewed for three full-time roles and one fixed-term contract role in more than a year. I've never felt so *unemployable*.
## A Widespread Crisis
My story isn't unique. Tech workers across the industry are struggling to regain employment in their fields despite relentless searching, experiencing **burnout on top of unemployment**. People like me, once heavily recruited and flush with career choices, now can't catch a break.
"I applied to hundreds of roles over several months. But the process was extremely slow and led nowhere," technical recruiter A. Kapadia told me. Kapadia was laid off in March 2024 and has held two short-lived roles since, supporting herself through paid content creation and side jobs like dog-sitting.
## The AI Factor
What's particularly frustrating is that many CEOs admit they over-hired during COVID and are now cutting costs to improve "efficiency" and to ramp up **A.I. infrastructure**. Not only is A.I. a costly investment that companies *hope* will pay off by automating more jobs, but the layoffs are also occurring at a breathless rate. While I was writing this piece, Oracle slashed another 30,000 jobs on March 31.
Joseph Politano, founder of the Apricitas Economics newsletter, explained: "Tech in particular has gone from adding 200,000 to 300,000 jobs per year to losing 10,000 to 50,000 jobs per year in one of the worst swings of any sector. This is genuinely the worst tech job market in decades."
## The Recruitment Bottleneck
A.I. is largely to blame for the hiring chaos, according to Tiberiu Trandaburu, CEO and founder of tech staffing agency Uptalen. "By adding the use of it, recruiting teams are increasing their productivity, but it's leading to more noise due to the greater number of people in the process and causing over-filtering and missing out on good candidates who don't meet rigid criteria," Trandaburu said.
## A Temporary Reprieve
I eventually landed a fixed-term contract role at another big tech company. I'm paid **25 percent less** than I was for my job at Meta, with five annual PTO days and zero paid holidays, and I'm overqualified for the work I do. Nonetheless, I'm grateful to be employed—and in the field I've invested so much of my career in. But I'm also exhausted. I feel like I'm trapped in a maze that keeps changing its configuration.
## The Human Cost
What tech leaders fail to grasp is that as they reprioritize toward a technology that's positioned to displace more workers, they're sending a message: **Profits trump all and workers are fat to trim**. The golden era of tech is dead.
Forty-nine percent of the American workforce says they're struggling, according to Gallup, the first time it's outnumbered the percentage of folks who say they're thriving. And discontent can be contagious, ultimately having a ripple effect on worsening morale and productivity.
The U.S. job market is projected to add 5.2 million jobs through 2034. The health care and social assistance industries are expected to experience the largest job growth and be the fastest-growing industries. Tech is playing a risky game of chicken with talent—because they *will* find greener grass elsewhere.]]></description>
<author>contact@remoteitjobs.app (RemoteITJobs.app)</author>
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<title><![CDATA[AI's Double-Edged Sword: How Artificial Intelligence is Reshaping Tennessee's Tech Job Market]]></title>
<link>https://www.remoteitjobs.app/article/ais-double-edged-sword-how-artificial-intelligence-is-reshaping-tennessees-tech-job-market</link>
<guid>ais-double-edged-sword-how-artificial-intelligence-is-reshaping-tennessees-tech-job-market</guid>
<pubDate>Mon, 20 Apr 2026 12:15:17 GMT</pubDate>
<description><
*The 101 Platform Way N. building in Nashville, Tenn., Thursday, April 16, 2026. The building is home to Amazon's Nashville offices.*
"The way I see it, in the next five years, there will be less and less entry level jobs. There are some of these jobs that will go away, and they will not be back," Middle Tennessee State University information-technology professor Sam Zaza said. "But at the same time, new jobs will come in."
Zaza pointed to **artificial intelligence as a key driver** behind the restructuring and subsequent layoffs. Just as the rise of the internet fueled the dot‑com bubble in the late 1990s and web analytics reshaped tech jobs by 2010, she and other experts expect AI to drive the next major shift.
"What we're seeing, it's not new," Zaza said. "It's history repeating itself."
Tennessee started increasing its tech investments in the early 2010s and quickly became one of the fastest-growing markets for tech jobs in 2015. Deputy Governor and Tennessee Economic Development Commissioner Stuart McWhorter said the COVID-19 pandemic briefly threw off that momentum, but tech remains a heavy focus for state leaders, especially as AI growth continues.
"Tennessee’s technology sector is an increasingly important part of our economic strategy, but we view it primarily through a workforce lens," McWhorter said. "We believe a real opportunity lies in strengthening and diversifying our tech talent pipeline, meaning cultivating the right environment to educate, train and retain highly skilled workers across the state."
## The Cycle of Hiring and Layoffs
Waymo implemented AI technology to take the place of rideshare drivers. Netflix uses automated models to customize customer profiles for movie suggestions and personalized artwork. Amazon deploys AI to optimize delivery routes, forecast demand for products and reduce the need for in-store employees at some Whole Foods locations with its just-walk-out model.
"The industry is still figuring out how to maximize the benefits it gets from AI usage," Zaza said.
The gap between the promise of new technologies and real-world implementation can create a **cycle of over-hiring followed by mass layoffs**, as seen recently at Amazon, Oracle and Meta, among others, she said.
Goldman Sachs researcher Joseph Briggs said this cycle will continue over the next decade, and up to **7% of the workforce will be displaced** during that time. If the displacement is spread across 10 years, he said he expects about 0.6% increase in the unemployment rate.
“You can see AI’s impact in the tech sector, where the employment share as a proportion of the whole economy has gone below the long-term trend,” Briggs said, in a March report. “But if it’s more frontloaded, the impacts on the economy are much larger."
After analyzing four decades of federal data encompassing numerous technology-driven layoffs, Goldman Sachs researchers Pierfrancesco Mei and Jessica Rindels wrote in a recent note that workers who lose jobs because of automation take longer to find new jobs and are more vulnerable to pay cuts.
“AI-driven displacement could impose lasting costs on affected workers, worsening labor market outcomes for several years,” an April 6 report said.
## Tennessee's Layoff Landscape

*Vanderbilt University Medical Center laid off over 600 employees in Nashville, Tenn., in 2025.*
In 2025, Tennessee layoffs hit a **five-year high** with 8,856 employees impacted by mass employee reductions, according to The Tennessee Department of Labor and Workforce Development. Those included companies like FedEx, Bridgestone, Kroger and Vanderbilt University Medical Center.
In 2026, about 2,821 employees were laid off, according to mass layoff reports from the Tennessee Department of Labor and Workforce Development. That total does not include cutbacks at Oracle, Amazon and other companies headquartered outside the state. Neither Oracle nor Amazon has specified how many employees were laid off in Tennessee.
Other major companies that cut down their Tennessee workforces this year include Nike, which slashed 583 jobs from distribution centers, auto parts maker First Brands, which nixed 333 jobs, and Blue Oval SK's staff reduction of 150 at a Stanton battery plant.
## The Future of Tennessee's Tech Industry

*From left, Knoxville Mayor Indya Kincannon, Nashville Mayor Freddie O’Connell, and Launch Tennessee CEO Lindsey Cox alongside Memphis Mayor Paul Young all listen as Chattanooga Mayor Tim Kelly speaks during Tennessee's 3686 conference at Cannery Hall in Nashville, Tenn., Tuesday, Sept. 10, 2024.*
As large tech companies cut back on entry‑level roles in favor of workers with AI skills, smaller Tennessee startups say the shift is creating new opportunities.
"For growing tech companies in Middle Tennessee, that tech talent pipeline that was freshly graduating and heading straight into corporate is maybe no longer heading into corporate at that same rate," LaunchTN Director Lindsey Cox said. "It's a really interesting opportunity to capture some folks that weren't going to be on the table before as potential hires."
LaunchTN is a nonprofit dedicated to supporting Tennessee's startup ecosystem, and Cox said she's encouraging their portfolio companies to take advantage of the situation. Still, Cox said the need for senior engineering talent who understand how to implement AI remains prominent.
"My broader concern as an individual would be how are we then training up junior folks to get that knowledge," Cox said. "We're looking to our universities for how they are educating that tech talent to be able to utilize AI. Companies are going to be looking for that immediately."

*The 101 Platform Way N. building, left, in Nashville, Tenn., Thursday, April 16, 2026. The building is home to Amazon's Nashville offices.*]]></description>
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<title><![CDATA[Why Truck Drivers Are Thriving in the AI Boom: The Blue-Collar Jobs AI Can't Replace]]></title>
<link>https://www.remoteitjobs.app/article/why-truck-drivers-are-thriving-in-the-ai-boom-the-blue-collar-jobs-ai-cant-replace</link>
<guid>why-truck-drivers-are-thriving-in-the-ai-boom-the-blue-collar-jobs-ai-cant-replace</guid>
<pubDate>Sun, 19 Apr 2026 12:15:17 GMT</pubDate>
<description>< to do so – my 21st birthday – and I’ve held a commercial driver's license (CDL) now for over 30 years.
Blue-collar guys like me have heard a lot from media elites about how our jobs will one day be irrelevant. We’ve been told that [technology will replace us](https://www.npr.org/2025/11/24/nx-s1-5615322/future-trucking-driverless-autonomous-trucks), and that we’ll need to find new skill sets to make a living.
But now the world’s tech leaders – the ones who are driving the AI revolution – insist that people like me are actually the foundation of the technology shaping the future. [Microsoft President Brad Smith believes](https://www.linkedin.com/posts/bradsmi_the-future-wont-just-be-built-by-coders-activity-7310640406839349248-1_79/) that a new generation of skilled tradesmen is needed to enable coders and data scientists, and in January, [Nvidia boss Jensen Huang predicted](https://www.cnbc.com/2026/01/22/nvidia-huang-blue-collar-jobs-salaries-skilled-trades.html) that people working to build technology facilities will soon be earning six-figure salaries.

The numbers prove them right. This year, [Big Tech is going to spend an estimated $650 billion](https://www.reuters.com/business/big-tech-invest-about-650-billion-ai-2026-bridgewater-says-2026-02-23/) to catch up with infrastructure needs, like expanded [data center](https://www.ib.barclays/our-insights/ai-revolution-meeting-massive-infrastructure-demand.html?cid=paidsearch-texads_google_google_themes_ai-revolution_rtg_powering-ai-2_433930051819&gclsrc=aw.ds&gad_source=1&gad_campaignid=21002365574&gbraid=0AAAAADCTLLBi4dItSsP88IJq11pq4QD3J&gclid=EAIaIQobChMIlOWKyu7ckwMVvihECB1bqTDIEAAYAiAAEgKvufD_BwE) capacity, to support artificial intelligence technology.
By the end of the decade, new investments in data center spending are expected to reach nearly [$3 trillion in the United States alone](https://www.mckinsey.com/industries/public-sector/our-insights/the-data-center-balance-how-us-states-can-navigate-the-opportunities-and-challenges).
And those centers won’t get built by desk-bound workers who don’t know how to use their hands. More than [300,000 new electricians](https://finance.yahoo.com/news/dire-electrician-shortage-life-death-080000954.html?guccounter=1&guce_referrer=aHR0cHM6Ly93d3cuZ29vZ2xlLmNvbS8&guce_referrer_sig=AQAAAAGGIvJ_NHDYdGT6irIcqzJl4-EaiTbv2xm_JK93tBW6WVseUVpvb5pn4YNXo4VDvlsAc9sPVDxd57oz2wCL8YcczvtNqpp_1bQN4L5wMpgMdpJoSliwIQqZcVe16tPAun2JqRODxC1ON6E1AxvWzwfEqwxaoFB5N-oZ79rec6LG) in the next decade will be needed to bring the facilities online, as well as legions of plumbers, construction workers and other skilled tradesmen. It will also require transporting all the pieces that create buildings and the technology therein to hundreds of locations around the country.
## AI Won't Replace Truck Drivers or Other Blue-Collar Jobs
I am an operations director for a logistics company that has hauled everything from people’s bedrooms to heavy data servers [for over 80 years](https://www.moveinterstate.com/about-us/), and we see and feel this boom every day. Several of our 70-plus licensed drivers are under 25 and have completed our industry-leading training program.
These are young people who leave high school and want to launch lifelong careers with good pay and benefits from day one. We’re also working with 18-year-olds, who are being trained to succeed in high-intensity situations like hauling 40 tons at 70 miles per hour cross-country.
Contrary to the narrative academia and city elites claim, I also believe that blue-collar jobs will be safe from AI for the foreseeable future. There are jobs computers just can’t do.
Perhaps a machine can drive a truck when it’s on the turnpike or some other controlled environment, but good outcomes in the most critical moments still depend on an experienced human operator making the right decisions. That’s why we put so much emphasis on training for drivers managing a fully loaded rig, navigating a city’s grid requiring tight turns in dense traffic or preventing thieves trying to steal cargo.
Logistics means “truck driving,” but also much more than getting stuff from point A to point B. In the data center boom, logistics teams are effectively part of the build itself: helping procure and move specialized equipment from overseas, coordinating secure shipments and making sure critical components arrive in the right order at the right time.
When deliveries slip, entire projects stall because you can’t install cooling, power, racks or switchgear until the right hardware is on site. In many cases, the driver and logistics crew aren’t just delivering; they’re also supporting the installation process, handling sensitive loads and keeping the build schedule on track.
The irony of all this new technology is that it’s white-collar workers who are now feeling the squeeze. During the Industrial Revolution, the first time tech revolutionized the world of work, it was [muscle power that was automated](https://economics.yale.edu/sites/default/files/hml_study_ada-ns.pdf). Back then, technological progress harmed blue-collar jobs.
This time around, it's very different: World-changing tech is uprooting people from [office roles](https://www.nytimes.com/2026/03/12/magazine/ai-coding-programming-jobs-claude-chatgpt.html), and blue-collar workers are finding their star rising again.
Over here in the world of 10-speeds and 18-wheelers, we’re optimistic. This could be the golden age of the working class, and truckers like us are excited to be at the center of it.
*Kris Edney is the director of Service Center Operations at [Interstate Moving, Relocation, Logistics, Inc.](https://www.moveinterstate.com/) in Springfield, Virginia.*]]></description>
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<title><![CDATA[AI Takes Your Job? This Startup Uses AI to Find You a New One Faster and Cheaper]]></title>
<link>https://www.remoteitjobs.app/article/ai-takes-your-job-this-startup-uses-ai-to-find-you-a-new-one-faster-and-cheaper</link>
<guid>ai-takes-your-job-this-startup-uses-ai-to-find-you-a-new-one-faster-and-cheaper</guid>
<pubDate>Fri, 17 Apr 2026 12:15:20 GMT</pubDate>
<description><
*Photographer: Emily Najera/Bloomberg*
**How It Works**
Pelgo uses advanced AI algorithms to match displaced workers with suitable job openings, analyzing skills, experience, and market demands to streamline the job search process. By automating parts of the placement service, the startup aims to reduce the time and resources typically required, offering a more accessible solution for those affected by technological disruptions.
**Broader Context**
This development is part of a larger trend where AI is being applied to solve problems it has helped create. As industries adopt more automation, tools like those from Pelgo could become essential in mitigating the negative impacts on the workforce. The startup's approach highlights a growing niche in the tech industry focused on **AI for social good** and **career transition support**.
**Related News**
In other tech news, Elon Musk is advancing plans for a chip manufacturing plant called Terafab to supply his companies, pushing suppliers to move at "light speed" on the project. This underscores the rapid pace of innovation and investment in AI and related technologies, which continues to reshape the job market.]]></description>
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