A complaint filed in a California state court in Los Angeles on behalf of Dr. Viviane Ghaderi alleges senior staff instructed her to ignore a legal department directive to flag violations of internal copyright policy. It also outlines a series of unethical actions against the former team lead, a doctor of electrical engineering who spent two stints at Amazon between 2018 and late 2023.

A messy, troubling situation

According to thecomplaint(PDF warning), Ghaderi began leading a new team overseeing Alexa search quality in September 2022, and things went south fast (viaThe Register). Among the grievances in the filing:

Between January and March 2023, Dr. Ghaderi’s team failed to hit its metrics. In a March meeting with Andrey Styskin, departmental director, Ghaderi mentioned recurring violations of Amazon’s internal copyright policies, and their contributions to subpar performance.

The filing alleges Styskin instructed Ghaderi to ignore the legal team’s directive to flag those violations, arguing, “Everyone else is doing it.” Dr. Ghaderi also indicated that she had previously received instruction to disregard copyright policy from “upper management.”

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Poor managerial decisions abound

There’s so much wrong here

From a business standpoint, Amazon appears to shuffle employees around like playing cards, which in many industries results from internal politics. That’s just bad business. But pressuring delayed maternity leave, demoting and refusing reinstatement on return, and making discriminatory remarks about gender and nationality are simply abhorrent.

But while the alleged discrimination is awful, the industry implications are a different kind of bad.

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Beware rogue team managers

AI’s fervent supporters often point out that, as currently written, copyright law and fair use provisions don’t address AI creations, which is true. AImay not be technically illegal, but many critics demand legal clarification that computers are different from human brains. While we don’t know exactly how Amazon’s copyright policies compare to established law, they’reat leastas strict.

The takeaway: Even well-equipped legal teams of massive corporations like Amazon can fall prey to individuals' hubris and dedication topromotion-driven development. If the complaint’s remotely accurate, we feel terrible for Dr. Ghaderi. Moreover, if her superiors hadn’t apparently discriminated against her pregnancy and nationality, they’d likely have ignored copyright policy without consequence.

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