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Malwarebytes Lays Off 100 Employees Ahead of Business Split (techcrunch.com) 20

Cybersecurity giant Malwarebytes this week laid off 100 employees as it prepares for a major restructuring that will see the business split into two, TechCrunch reported. From the report: The layoffs come almost exactly a year after Malwarebytes eliminated 14% of its global workforce. A former employee who asked not to be named told TechCrunch that the layoffs come just weeks after the company's chief product officer, chief information officer, and chief technology officer were let go. An archived version of the Malwarebytes leadership page shows that these positions no longer exist at the company. Multiple posts on LinkedIn showed that a number of additional employees were laid off this week. One former Malwarebytes employee described the layoffs as "an unfortunate annual tradition."
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Malwarebytes Lays Off 100 Employees Ahead of Business Split

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  • One former Malwarebytes employee described the layoffs as "an unfortunate annual tradition."

    Well now that must be fun every year for the employees.

    • by Rosco P. Coltrane ( 209368 ) on Thursday August 31, 2023 @10:32AM (#63812164)

      Well now that must be fun every year for the employees.

      I lived through this and it's terrible.

      Back in the early 2000s, I was working for your typical dot-com bubble startup. The company went from 9 to 360 employees between 1999 and 2001, and sure enough, after the bubble burst, the company started firing people in waves.

      I remember it vividly: the first time it happened one Tuesday morning, our CEO invited us in the break room for coffee and donut and for "some news about operations". Long story short: 10 employees got their pink slips that morning. Of course their contribution was invaluable and he was sad to let them go, but it was to ensure the survival of the company. Yeah right... Why them of course was anyone's guess, and a big blow to the poor suckers' self-esteem.

      Some weeks later, it happened again. Same thing: Tuesday morning, coffee and donuts. This time people got a little alarmed, and rightly so: a few more came out of the break room with their pink slips.

      And again, and again. Tuesday morning donut lottery we called it.

      It happened 8 times. Each time, those of us who were still there wondered if we'd get axed. Those who did often went back to their office crying to clear their things. Those who didn't breathed a sigh a relief, knowing that they still had a job... for now. Very stressful.

      I survived the 8 rounds, only to find the doors closed with a chain a padlock one morning, and the officers nowhere to be seen. They left with whatever was left in the till and the creditors got the court to send the sheriff to secure the remainder of the assets.

      • You got 8 rounds of free coffee and donuts, nice!
        • You jest, but this terrible period is seared into my memory. 22-some years later, whenever my company invites us for a mystery meeting, I feel a pang of anxiety. My company is flush with cash, I trust it completely and I know nothing bad will happen, yet I still get a feeling of impending doom each and every time. And it's been like that at all the places I've worked at since that time.

          • That's capitalism! I went through the typical programmer burnout cycles in the late 90's/early 2000's - enough to give me severe PTSD, promised lots of great things but never got them, worthless stock options, mergers, buyouts, IPOs, mergers, more mergers and acquisitions. Mystery meetings are usually someone quitting these days, but yeah there's always that PTSD anxiety looming in the corners. Just when you think the market has consolidated too far, the company sells off your division to another company,
      • by RedK ( 112790 )

        > The company went from 9 to 360 employees between 1999 and 2001

        I think a lot of people don't have realistic expectations at some point. When you're in a situation where a company grows massively, you need to be sure to see the same growth in revenues and especially, in net revenues. If not, that's a disaster.

        I remember 8 months ago, everyone was lambasting Elon for shrinking Twitter back down to 3000 employees, down from 8000. Yet anyone who bothered to research understood Elon simply brought back 20

        • Problem with your analysis is that Twitter has had a ton of problems because of those musky layoffs. He laid off people doing real work along with no doubt some amount of dead weight, and Twitter suffered for it. The front page didn't work correctly for weeks on end, literally. That's pathetic.

          • by RedK ( 112790 )

            > Problem with your analysis is that Twitter has had a ton of problems because of those musky layoffs.

            Twitter has had a ton of problems because they finally started doing something to the site. Twitter hadn't had a new feature in forever, even with a bloated workforce and in the last 8 months, the site has gone through multiple revisions to increase tweet lengths, editing, the revamped Blue subscription, creator revenue sharing. Tons of new and exciting features the old team just weren't doing. They w

    • Been there with a computer company. There was even a time where it was monthly that they'd send the henchmen around. They'd walk the building, stop by your desk, tap you on the shoulder, then watch as you cleaned out your personal items and escort you out of the building. THAT'S a morale booster, let me tell ya.

  • by BishopBerkeley ( 734647 ) on Thursday August 31, 2023 @10:22AM (#63812142) Journal
    One company to create malware and a second to remove it? As browsers become more secure, the utility of malwarebytes was on the wane anyway. It doesn't seem like they ever managed to grow out of that niche.
    • by EvilSS ( 557649 ) on Thursday August 31, 2023 @10:38AM (#63812184)

      The split — which was not previously made public — will see Malwarebytes separate its consumer and corporate-facing business units. The consumer business will focus on tools such as identity protection and VPN, while the remaining business will focus on enterprise-facing software like managed and endpoint detection, Kleczynski tells TechCrunch.

      • Thank you for the clarification. It makes sense, but I couldn't resist making the joke.
      • by antdude ( 79039 )

        Like Symantec when Broadcom took its enterprise and consumer spun off to NortonLifeLock before renaming to GEN Digital.

  • Nice! We get to watch corporate blackhats create a new liability shield in real time! This sounds a lot like the NSO Group spinning off Quadream so they could sell their hacks to Saudi Arabia without losing their place in the Israeli/US markets.
  • https://www.malwarebytes.com/b... [malwarebytes.com] I don't know what size it is (was?), or how many of its staff are affected, but come on, acquire a new company one week, lay off 100 staff the next? How are people supposed to have a life? Companies that complain of falling staff loyalty have actions like this to blame. It's like trying to make a home and have a family in a video game level where every floor tile you touch falls away a few seconds later.

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