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Ask HN: Is there a bad employers (who have a records of not paying) list?

trowa159 · 53 points · 65 comments · 1 天前
HN 讨论

I worked with a few employers on contracts, and there were situations where they haven't paid fees for a while. Is there a list or site that lists all the employers and if they have a record of them not fulfilling their contracts?

评论

20 条顶层评论
alex_young1 天前

I worked for one such employer long ago that would “accidentally” bounce paychecks. This happened with such regularity that people would take their checks to said employer’s bank on payday and stand in line to cash them before heading to the office. You’d see a couple of coworkers in line to do this. Maintaining a list like this is probably not super useful. Any company that does this kind of stuff as a routine will not continue the routine of employing people for long.

01284a7e1 天前

"Any company that does this kind of stuff as a routine will not continue the routine of employing people for long." "On contracts" is explicitly mentioned. While bouncing your W-2 employees' paychecks is a big no-no, there are plenty of organizations that stiff contractors for decades.

HarHarVeryFunny1 天前

> plenty of organizations that stiff contractors for decades POTUS was famous for doing this - stiffing small contractors working on his real estate projects. This seemed like a pretty major character tell, but folks voted for him all the same. https://www.nbcnews.com/news/us-news/hundreds-claim-donald-t...

HarHarVeryFunny1 天前

I used to work for a tiny company where probably just due to lack of cash (and/or failure to properly manage the payroll account) this was also an issue. We'd be given our paychecks in the morning and go to the bank at lunchtime to cash them!

unknown1 天前

[deleted]

cyanydeez1 天前

>will not continue the routine of employing people for long The secret is to do this under different corporate names, not that they go out of business literally, but in America and probably elsewhere, they just rebrand and restablish elsewhere.

sandworm1011 天前

There first error was paying people. In a past life i worked in the entertainment industry. I was daily shocked by the number of non-employee "staff" positions that were unpaid. Students working a summer for "experience" came back a second summer as managers, then never left. A couple became supervisors of paid staff. Consumers would be shocked at how much profesional animation and cgi work is actually done by unpaid interns. Your favorite youtube channel? Dig into what an "association" with a local college actually means for thier bottom line. I also met convicts doing "volunteer" work which did not pay but satisfied some aspect of thier parole. And with small businesses, there was of course the many children of business owners who were "helping out mom and dad", often as unpaid managers, in hopes of one day inheriting the business.

playorizaya1 天前

Make it. I’ll add a few. These YC founders are not held accountable for their ridiculous behavior

trowa1591 天前

will do.. I want this list because I don't want to see people needing to go through this again. My situation was with this guy Derek, we signed a contract with a fixed monthly amount. 1 and a half years later, he told me the Israeli investor pulled the plug. Ok, understandable, it's been 2 years, and he told me he doesn't have anything to do with the business anymore, so don't bother him. Guess what, he's got money to work on some other projects. Feels like they know too well, they can just get away with it because going to court is gonna take ages. its BS.

playorizaya19 小时前

Call it FounderRank. Just let people share stories like this. Like RateMyProfessor but for founders, so people know who to avoid.

jmkd1 天前

This is absolutely needed for media companies in London, some of whom may pay freelancers many months after invoicing and only if the freelancer repeatedly reminds them and escalates towards legal threats. When I ran such a company we made a point of paying people the same day they invoiced in order to stand out as being great to work with, it was the easiest win ever.

eqmvii1 天前

businesses absolutely love not paying for things. each other, contractors, etc. employees don’t realize how good they have it with payroll protections tbh. That’s how it should be of course!

f4c390121 天前

In much the same way as some HR departments exist to protect the business from their employees, some Finance departments exist to not pay the bills (for as long as possible). They may of course do this because the business itself is not being paid

microgpt1 天前

I read somewhere (HN?) that a guy (an engineer who somehow got temporarily involved in running a restaurant?) got a restaurant a huge (70%?) discount on meat by buying a year's meat upfront on a predictable delivery schedule. Your vendors hate 90 day payment just as much as you hate when your customers do it, and they are covering for non-payment, late payment, and difficult customers by raising their prices. Crucially, they have to charge you the "bad customer" price because they don't know you, and then your incentive is to be a bad customer because it doesn't cost anything extra for you. The restaurant owner thought it was crazy but couldn't argue with the cost reduction. The moral of the story was that if you'd just communicate more you may find a mutual benefit. The restaurant loved the vendor but the vendor also felt the restaurant was their best customer even though they were getting 70% less money! - because of the predictability, less need for inventory, better cash flow.

bluefirebrand1 天前

This is why a public shitlist of non-paying employers might be useful If companies start taking a reputation hit for not paying contractors in a timely fashion, they will correct the behavior eventually

lokar1 天前

I imagine if you start one, and it gets much use, right away you have a validation problem.

hnfong1 天前

Also, in most countries (especially the US), also a defamation problem.

lokar1 天前

In the US? How is it different than yelp? (Except for the extortion)

matsemann1 天前

There's a difference between "I didn't like their salad" (opinion) and "they don't pay their bills" (a fact, that could be defamation if not true)

lokar1 天前

What about “the service was slow”

microgpt1 天前

In Germany if you leave a Google review saying "the salad tasted bad" you may get sued for defamation, but probably not because they'll threaten Google first, who will take it down and ding your account. If they do sue you, they will win unless you can prove to a judge that the salad tasted bad. You will then have to pay a few thousand dollars of damages and another few thousand of legal fees (yours and theirs).

pluc1 天前

Glassdoor before they allowed takeovers of corporate pages by the business operators. But your best bet is probably unfortunately to scan social media. There's ghostjobs.io for job offer reviews but I'm not aware of anything else.

anymouse1234561 天前

This is why, as a contractor, you never, never, ever transfer source materials until the bill has been paid. If a company insists on working inside their version control system, insist that each biweekly payment be submitted in advance.

anymouse1234561 天前

Early in my career, when I was dealing more with bottom-tier customers, the first 3 companies tried to stiff me. They were all surprised to learn that they couldn't do much without the source material that they never paid for. One of them was very surprised when the website flipped to a white screen on a Monday morning at 9am. They called asking why "THEIR" website was blank. I explained that they didn't own any websites, as no money was exchanged. If they would like me to transfer MY website to them, all they needed to do, was submit payment, along with late fees. The money hit my account within the hour and they owned a website a few minutes after that.

Bender1 天前

I do not have an answer to your question but if a company is not paying people contact the labor board in their state/province and report them. Example for the US [1]. Everyone not being paid should do the same. The risk of course is that the company may have to accelerate plans to shut down. a.k.a. pulling off the bandage but if one is essentially working for free then maybe that is not so bad. [1] - https://www.dol.gov/agencies/whd/state/contacts

lemonademan1 天前

I don't know of any website that lists all employers who break contracts or miss payments. I might just create one. However, sometimes past contractors or clients leave reviews warning about unpaid freelance invoices or poor business ethics on review sites like Trustpilot.

GrinningFool1 天前

I don't know that anyone can risk running such a site. There'd need to be a long trail of proof behind each claim, and proof is getting easier to manufacture by the day.

jcrben1 天前

Section 230

WaitWaitWha1 天前

An unethical company is likely would consider a lawsuit to put such private site out of business. A collection of unethical companies would be an exponentially higher risk to such site.

tux31 天前

Sounds like a Streissand effect waiting to happen. Besides, IANAL, but I'm sure plenty of people here could find a lawyer to file for an easy anti-SLAPP defense. Factual statements about bad employers are very much free speech. Judges aren't particularly fond of frivolous lawsuits. There are already mechanisms in place to quickly throw those away without wasting everyone's time and money.

toss11 天前

All true, but anyone putting up a site would need the bankroll to handle such a lawsuit through to winning, and then be able to collect on the SLAPP judgement (which the non-paying employer would likely have put up obstacles to collection). That's the big problem with lawsuits — you start out in a losing position just because of the cost to defend. So a random individual without the bankroll to defend is likely vulnerable, and this is a libel suit, so unlike a copyright suit, you can't solve it just by taking it down. You posted the allegation, now you must defend it. Yes, the truth is an absolute defense against libel, but you still need to defend it that far (through pretrial motions, discovery, etc.). Even getting to file for a dismissal is likely to be $five-figures with a good attorney, and you NEED a good attny. OFC, if you have a good case, a good firm may take it on spec, but.... And of course, how do you know all the postings on your site are actually fully factual and not exaggerated in any way? Because, any honest employer falsely accused would be rightly very pissed off. Tough problem.

tux31 天前

>And of course, how do you know all the postings on your site are actually fully factual and not exaggerated in any way? You don't, but you smile and just delete the content. And then you've done your part as a platform. You're very happy to delete things when notified, and you do it promptly. Then you get to publish a very factual transparency notice. Someone will have archived the page already? Social media is upset when they hear that the big company tried to attack the small independent site to take down this page that They Don't Want You To See? That's out of your hands, you're a neutral platform and you've done your part. You just need to fold immediately, and you're covered by all the safe harbor neutral platform protections. Same as forums, social media, any website with user-generated content. Now that won't stop an asshole from suing you over frivolous nonsense. But it does make it easy to throw their suit away - like you said, if you have the spite and money to follow through with a defense.

ImPostingOnHN1 天前

> I'm sure plenty of people here could find a lawyer to file for an easy anti-SLAPP defense. SLAPPs are only illegal in certain jurisdictions, not including federal or even many states.

fsckboy1 天前

>Factual statements about bad employers and how is this hypothetical website you're hyping supposed to uncover the factuality of statements random people from the internet are posting?

trowa1591 天前

I guess it needs to be upvoted by other verified users? say if user A is claiming that user C hasn't paid the bill,l. User B can come in and verify it also happened to them. or they need to sign in using Linkedin for credibility. and provide text or photo evidence?

tux31 天前

Same way any other website with user-generated content deals with it. The website has broad immunity as a platform, but is expected to take down content that would be illegal when notified. Random people on the Internet have been at it long enough that there is plenty of precedent to establish that you can safely host a platform. But then again, I am not a lawyer, I am not your lawyer, and for legal reasons this is not the legal definition of legal advice, etc.

microgpt1 天前

Require strict KYC of all reviewers. This should be no privacy concern since it's about B2B contracts that operate in public between two registered businesses. Don't publicize who wrote a review, but keep it on hand for subpoenas. You are probably not liable for defamation if you can identify who wrote the review - and they should be able to prove it's true. Ask a lawyer first of course.

trowa1591 天前

yeah, I was thinking user can only register with valid Linkedin profile. We blur their images ofcourse, except for the person who owns, of course

singleshot_1 天前

Country recorder has a list of judgements against people and entities found to be in breach of contract. This is what exists but probably not what you were thinking of.

trowa15923 小时前

nah, was thinking more like a solid list of the company's name, founders info that future contractors can look at so they can decide if they wanna work with them or not

qsxfthnkp23221 天前

A startup I worked for many years ago did this. The founder would be like its okay you babe you got 1% equity or whatever And I would also be like I gotta pay my rent and buy groceries though... That company went under in a year. Surprisingly... The founder reached out in the years since talking about his new endeavor trying to get me to join the team. Ha. Jokes.

rf151 天前

This is just asking for defamation troubles.

pluc1 天前

Depending on your jurisdiction, reviews are protected free speech. You're arguably reviewing your employment.

dismalaf1 天前

If they actually didn't pay staff, do you really think they want to go to court?

hnfong1 天前

... yes? Also, what if there were malicious submissions? Then they would definitely go to court. How can you tell?

dismalaf1 天前

It's easy to prove that you didn't get paid though. The company would lose in a second, assuming the claim is true. Defamation is only defamation if it isn't true. Surely they'd know that they didn't pay the employee writing the review... That being said, the whole scenario seems absurd. Most countries have easy ways for employees to file claims of non-payment and companies are forced to pay up.. I've never heard of a company not paying staff AND getting away with it unless they're bankrupt.

Physkal1 天前

How reliable has Glass door been lately?

OutOfHere1 天前

Considering they require an ID now, it's not usable anymore.

unknown1 天前

[deleted]

duxup1 天前

How long does a place last doing this? I would assume they go out of business, or (at least in the US) run into an informed employee who reports them to local state authorities ... and maybe still go out of business.

dqv1 天前

Yeah, but I have no idea how good it is or how expensive it is: https://www.dnb.com/en-us/smb.html

pgt1 天前

This is such an obvious feature for Glassdoor, but needs verification to avoid abuse.

unknown1 天前

[deleted]

brador1 天前

Glassdoor?