After other GitHub employees and those outside the company criticized the decision, the company is looking to make amends. Now, the code-repository giant says it made “significant errors of judgment and procedure” in firing the employee. The still anonymous employee posted on a GitHub Slack account “stay safe homies, Nazis are about” during the Capitol riots earlier this month. After complaints from employees, GitHub’s human resources team warned the users for using the word “Nazi”. However, a few days later the same employee was fired. The company said the reason was changes in behavior and not because of the message. 200 GitHub employees, which is over 10% of the company’s workforce, co-singed a letter pushing executives to be clearer in their stance against white supremacy. Importantly, they also asked for a formal reason for the dismissal.
Investigation
GitHub says it launched an internal investigation on Jan. 11 and completed its probe on Jan. 15. Over the weekend, Chief Operation Officer (COO) confirmed in a blog post an “outside investigator conduct[ed] an independent investigation” and found “significant errors of judgment and procedure.” That result has cost the company’s head of HR they job as they resigned. Furthermore, GitHub says the decision to fire the employee has been reversed. However, it seems the employee has not yet returned to the company as GitHub says it is in talks with his representative. Lastly, the company also issued a public apology: “To the employee we wish to say publicly: we sincerely apologize.” Tip of the day: Did you know you can also use OneDrive to save folders and files in the cloud which are located outside the main OneDrive-folder. Check out our step-by-step tutorial to use this practical method also for your Windows 10-PC.