Only 72 hours a week, that's adorable ... When the iPhone first released at Apple I was working 100ish hours a week ...<p>In all seriousness, I was in my 20s, Apple was the dream job, and I was foolish. When you work those kind of hours you are donating money to those own the company. If you are lucky like I was you'll get some of it back. Most do not.
I went through an interview loop for their platform engineering team.<p>The technical depth that the interview went was not very deep. They were asking me questions about how I would replace a CPU in a server. Physical server. The whole interview was just one person after another asking basic questions, and then they said they wanted to extend me an offer. Not a very competitive one at that.<p>Culture also seems like an issue, as you have to use their internal translation apps to talk to mainland coworkers and I didn't get a good vibe about general skill on staff. And that is before the fact that it's China.<p>I wouldn't have taken the job even if they weren't chineese linked. It did not sound like a great environment to work in, nor one where you could shine.
996 is already the norm at places like Facebook and Amazon (stack ranking means you have to work the same number of hours to deliver similar results as your overworking colleagues).<p>There are far fewer tech companies that pay as well as ByteDance (aka TikTok) -- by that, I mean 95th percentile of market pay -- but DON'T have these kinds of working hours. Google is one of the rare exceptions.<p>If you want to actually be able to afford a house in the Bay Area, your options are limited.
I get bad vibes from the tik-tok/Bytedance recruiters who would contact me. It seemed obvious to me that they were going to expect 996 style work-ethic, and even for the "300-400k+" they were quoting, I don't think it's worth it at all.
> “Everyone there is utterly miserable, and life is too short,” the source said. “During my first year before the pandemic hit, I can count possibly four or five weekends during the year where I did not work.”<p>Just typical Mainland China company, checking HQ location should be enough to make the right decision.<p>Addition (from reply below):<p>"It's a <i>very</i> cultural thing, partially a work culture rooted in factory-style production instead of innovation, quality, and mastery, partially a status thing, a symbol of control and "ownership" over the workforce. Welcome to China."
Another reason not to work at Tik Tok is that they are simply not to be trusted with their size and influence. They are very aggressive with their censorship. It’s surprising given that they are based in China, but I’ve seen them ban content that goes against American progressive views more aggressively than even Twitter or Reddit or Facebook. For moderates and conservatives, it means this giant network amplifies everyone else and suppresses them. In other markets they implement different policies that are similarly aggressive but with different biases. Their practices are unacceptable and tech workers shouldn’t help bolster such anti-free-speech organizations.