We are about to enter a very weird time as cyber infrastructure starts to breakdown at an even faster rate than it is now. We have been in a software quality crisis now for five or ten years probably as companies shirked quality and customer satisfaction for shareholder value. Enshitification. Now we are going to add using experimental AI vibe coding into a culture that is already literally killing with its lack of attention to quality. Buckle up. Answer from ConsiderationSea1347 on reddit.com
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Reddit
reddit.com › r/jobsearch › over 75,000 people impacted by tech layoffs in 2025 - my advice
r/jobsearch on Reddit: Over 75,000 people impacted by tech layoffs in 2025 - My Advice
May 27, 2025 -

Hey all, was scanning a tech statistics site today and saw an absolutely startling statistic:
"So far in 2025, there have been 317 layoffs at tech companies with 75,463 people impacted.
In 2024, there were 1,115 layoffs with over 230,000 people impacted."

That's a lot of people, ranging from companies like Dell and Intel to Meta and Microsoft. So, despite this incredibly horrid news - very sorry for those affected - I wanted to give back to the community and drop a few good sources for those seeking tech jobs.

These resources are really helpful - I essentially take a big list of niche job boards separated by technology, so that you actually hear back from recruiters. LinkedIn is tough for the job search because either their posts are

• outdated
• spammed
• irrelevant.

Here is a list of niche job boards to help you talented engineers and computer scientists:

• Python.org/jobs - Apparently, there is a job board just for Python jobs, which was shocking to see as I never expected an open-source community to list jobs. I would overall rate this an A-, great resource, but I have never gotten an interview from this list.

• HappyTechies.com - This one focuses exclusively on Microsoft technology jobs, so if you worked in Azure, for example, you'd want to find a role at a company that uses this technology and needs an experienced professional. Overall, a great resource.

• Reactjobsboard.com - This one isn't community-driven and seems to just be a wrapper around a bigger database.

• datajobs.com - Whenever websites look like this, you can expect a lot higher-quality engagement and resources. This is great for jobs in data science from smaller companies.

• levels.fyi - I want to put this here, not because you can land jobs from it, but because you can see what salaries should look like depending on your role, company, location, and experience. Super valuable - bookmark this :)

Let me know if this list helped you at all! Any questions about these, please let me know :)

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Reddit
reddit.com › r/cscareers › tech lay offs 2025
r/cscareers on Reddit: Tech lay offs 2025
April 27, 2025 -

Hey all, I’m a software engineer and I have a CS degree with 3 years of experience. I got laid off in August 2023 and I’m still struggling to find a tech job, I’ve learned Data analyst and Data engineer as well so I can be flexible to any tech position, but unfortunately the market is horrible. I applied for more than 2k jobs in this past 2 years, but I got around 12 interviews from referrals and I could’ve tell that they already have someone in their mind. My question is should I just change my career and jump into something else other than Tech industry? Because there are layoffs everywhere right now and I believe that tech companies prefer AIs over Software Engineers 🥲

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Tldr, yes I don't think AI is really replacing nearly as many people as people think. The tech sector just isn't doing that hot in general and is largely being propped up by the AI boom. The economy in general is uncertain, and tech is one of the cheapest things for companies to cut. The tech industry has always been more cyclic than most industries and eventually the market will recover, but- The market may not recover in places that specifically align with your role. Even if I don't think AI will replace the entire industry, it will certainly get rid of some roles (hence analogy of tailors and seeing machines. It made the tailor skill set less relevant, but industry employment only went up), and your specific skill set might be one of them. Jack of all trades generalists and areas adjacent to full stack seem to probably be the worst hit by AI, as well as increased off shoring. The other problem is that yeah the industry is kinda terrible. Looking at the 08 recession, a lot of people were laid off and were still unable to find employment when tech came back bc companies preferred to hire fresh grads if they didn't need much experience and people who were continually employed if they did need the experience. This is the real reason to worry, as remaining unemployed rn makes you less employable if the market does ever come back. You always want to keep moving somewhere, never stay in one spot, especially if that one spot is unemployment. If the market recovers, so does your competition, and you have a big gap on your resume that some others won't. If you're at all interested in staying in the tech industry, id focus on more specialized or tech adjacent industries (ie I actually work in computational physics. Not bc of the current layoffs so I prolly won't switch back, but I do have a lot of transferrable skills that could get me back on the industry if I do choose and the market does go back.)
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AI is increasingly taking over entry-level computer science jobs, and many senior professionals now prefer using AI to get results instead of spending time mentoring junior staff.
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Reddit
reddit.com › r/technology › 54% of tech hiring managers expect layoffs in 2025
r/technology on Reddit: 54% of tech hiring managers expect layoffs in 2025
March 13, 2025 - Tech companies hired too many people during the boom. Now with AI and budget cuts, they want smaller, more efficient teams. So, layoffs in 2025 make sense.
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Reddit
reddit.com › r/layoffs › where all the tech workers are going
r/Layoffs on Reddit: Where All the Tech Workers Are Going
June 25, 2025 -

Jun 24, 2025

"Over the past eighteen months, more than 170,000 U.S. tech workers lost their jobs, with layoffs rising 35% in early 2025. Programming roles shrank by 27% between 2022 and 2024, while average tech salaries dropped over 12%.

Many displaced workers moved to smaller tech firms, finance, consulting, healthcare, or logistics, while others pursued freelancing, entrepreneurship, or public sector roles, especially cybersecurity. Reskilling in AI and advanced tech skills has surged.

However, entry-level hiring declined sharply, creating a divide between established professionals and newcomers. This situation demands stronger reskilling, hiring incentives, and labor mobility support across industries."

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Reddit
reddit.com › r/layoffs › tech layoffs next year
r/Layoffs on Reddit: Tech Layoffs next year
November 15, 2025 -

from what I’m seeing on blind, it seems like there’s gonna be an aggressive round in q1.

the big profitable company I work for is raising their annual layoff quota by 2x what it normally is.

Amazon is also doing their big round too, they typically are a leader in layoff practice so other companies will do the same.

be prepared everyone. I think 2026 is going to be one of the worst years yet for layoffs.

Find elsewhere
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Reddit
reddit.com › r/layoffs › a comprehensive list of 2025 tech layoffs | techcrunch
r/Layoffs on Reddit: A comprehensive list of 2025 tech layoffs | TechCrunch
July 14, 2025 - What about millions of jobs that moved to Indian tech hubs??? Microsoft, Google, Amazon, Walmart, and other big companies have good amount employees in India. At least tax brackets need to be removed for such companies. But ideally, those companies must be extra taxed! ... Oracle just laid off 10% of its staff in India. about 3k · Just because you don't hear it doesn't mean layoffs aren't happening globally due to economic uncertainty by the current administration.
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Reddit
reddit.com › r/jobs › tech layoffs in 2025 are not because of ai - here are the 5 real reasons for corporate cuts
r/jobs on Reddit: Tech layoffs in 2025 are not because of AI - Here are the 5 real reasons for corporate cuts
January 25, 2025 -

While news headlines are talking up “AI Driven” layoffs; the reasons are more basic :

* Purge and cutback after the hiring binge a few years ago

* Geopolitical factors - Administration in the US, Trade Wars and uncertainty over global economic outlook

* Stock market taking a beating. Companies are under pressure from investors to increase profits. Leaders under pressure to show bottomline cutbacks when topline is not growing

* Discretionary spending cuts - IT projects on ice

* DOGE in America

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Reddit
reddit.com › r/layoffs › with progress in ai, 2025 is going to be the be year of strict budget cuts, especially in it/tech.
r/Layoffs on Reddit: With progress in AI, 2025 is going to be the be year of strict budget cuts, especially in IT/Tech.
July 2, 2024 -

Personal opinion but with the recent progress in AI, 2025 is going to be the year of strict IT budget cuts.

A lot of contracts are going to be signed/have already been signed with external AI service providers who are going to work to learn the systems with the remaining survivors post the layoffs. Then it’s an experimentation game for the technology but layoffs regardless.

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The landscape of IT jobs has shifted significantly over the past 20 years due to advancements in technology, the rise of outsourcing, and the increased reliance on contract-based work. As automation tools and AI systems have become more sophisticated, many routine IT tasks, such as system monitoring, data management, and basic troubleshooting, are now handled with minimal human intervention, or handled by outside firms (cuts internally, handled by specialization by other firms). Organizations seeking cost efficiencies (think of the C-Levels and investors) have increasingly outsourced IT functions to specialized firms or overseas markets, where labor is often less expensive. Rather than maintaining large in-house teams, companies are increasingly turning to contractors and freelancers to fill short-term or project-specific IT needs. This has streamlined some operations and reduced costs, they have also led to job losses and a growing need for IT professionals to adapt by upskilling and focusing on more strategic or niche roles. It also leads to upper management thinking that these patterns will apply to all IT jobs within the company. AI is just another tool that is speeding some of this up; it's making leaders think that it can easily replace members of IT, and in some cases they're not wrong. But this slow, steady pattern will continue; leaders will over-estimate tools, outsourcing's abilities and continue to pull back and rehire. I'd say right now that the biggest problem has been the increasing speed of over-seas outsourcing - couple those teams that have historically been low achieving in results with AI and you can likely get something that returns decent results
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If I ask the AI service provider to build a  specific system to suite my specific company use case is it able to do it or it’s just “Actual Indians” doing it?
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Reddit
reddit.com › r/layoffs › 600,000 layoffs in 2025
r/Layoffs on Reddit: 600,000 layoffs in 2025
May 8, 2025 -
  • Jan: 50,000

  • Feb: 170,000

  • Mar: 275,000

  • Apr: 105,000

It sounds like a lot..

https://www.challengergray.com/blog/april-2025-job-cuts-plunge-but-doge-drives-2025-layoffs-to-pandemic-era-highs/

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Reddit
reddit.com › r/technology › tech layoffs hit 100,000+ in 2025: intel, microsoft, meta, and more slash thousands of jobs
Tech Layoffs Hit 100,000+ in 2025: Intel, Microsoft, Meta, and More Slash Thousands of Jobs : r/technology
May 28, 2025 - Every single one of those tech companies doing layoffs is hiring heavily in Mexico. They’re just outsourcing and that’s why they’re doing layoffs. It has nothing to do with anything else. He’s getting recruited like crazy while everyone I try to help in the US has pretty much no options. ... TL;DR: They suck at the work. more replies More replies More replies More replies ... I still see devs saying this dumb shit. Like bro it’s 2025
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Reddit
reddit.com › r/ibm › tech layoffs 2025: ibm lays off 8,000 employees as ai replaces hr department
Tech layoffs 2025: IBM lays off 8,000 employees as AI replaces HR department : r/IBM
April 8, 2025 - This is old news. The HR layoffs were mainly in 2024. This year’s layoffs were Marketing and Finance Operations, plus consulting. 10,000 people laid off Spring 2025.
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Reddit
reddit.com › r/layoffs › no major rate cut in 2025- more layoff in 2025
r/Layoffs on Reddit: No major rate cut in 2025- More layoff in 2025
May 11, 2024 -

Well our honorable JP said job market isn't too bad, so no major cut in 2025. Which means, we won't see any recovery in 2025. What do you think?
Apparently, Mr. JP doesn't look at the actual job market.

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Reddit
reddit.com › r/layoffs › laid off tech workers- what are you doing now?
Laid off tech workers- What are you doing now? : r/Layoffs
January 9, 2025 - I found out later, communicating ... another 300 in November. With recent aerospace developments at the gov't level, it's likely there will be even more laid off come April 2025....
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Reddit
reddit.com › r/cscareerquestions › giant tech companies cut approx 180,000 jobs as ai reshapes the tech industry
r/cscareerquestions on Reddit: Giant tech companies cut approx 180,000 jobs as AI reshapes the tech industry
1 month ago -

Major technology companies have eliminated more than 180,000 positions in 2025, marking one of the most significant workforce reductions in the industry's history as companies pivot toward artificial intelligence and automation. The cuts, which have accelerated through November, are affecting roles from middle management to customer support across Microsoft, Amazon, Google, Intel, and other tech giants.

The layoffs represent a shift from traditional cost-cutting to a fundamental restructuring of how tech companies operate. In November alone, Verizon announced plans to cut more than 13,000 employees, while HP disclosed it may eliminate between 4,000 and 6,000 jobs by 2028. Apple trimmed sales positions managing business, education, and government accounts, and Amazon cut approximately 14,000 corporate workers in October, including more than 1,800 engineers.

This doesn't mean AI will take over jobs, I just means AI will more jobs that require physical human interaction in fields like agriculture, plumbing, welding, waste collection etc which will be a goldmine.