The AI Backlash: Why Thousands of Amazon, Google and Apple Workers Are Saying “Stop”
The AI Backlash: Why Thousands of Amazon, Google and Apple Workers Are Saying “Stop”
In late November 2025, over 1,000 employees at Amazon — and thousands more from Google, Apple and other tech firms — signed an open letter demanding an immediate halt to the company’s “warp-speed” AI rollout.
Spearheaded by Amazon Employees for Climate Justice (AECJ), the appeal warns that current AI strategies endanger jobs, democratic values and environmental sustainability — signalling a growing internal revolt against unchecked automation and corporate AI ambitions.
Spearheaded by Amazon Employees for Climate Justice (AECJ), the appeal warns that current AI strategies endanger jobs, democratic values and environmental sustainability — signalling a growing internal revolt against unchecked automation and corporate AI ambitions.
What Has Happened: From Internal Warning to Cross-Company Solidarity
AECJ gathered more than 1,000 anonymous signatures from Amazon employees across roles — engineers, product managers, warehouse staff, marketers, and more.Outside Amazon, the letter drew solidarity from over 2,400 workers at other major tech firms, including Google and Apple.
The primary concerns: the company’s aggressive AI push threatens environmental goals, job security, and democratic norms. The letter calls the strategy an “all-costs-justified, warp-speed” race that may inflict “staggering damage to democracy, to our jobs, and to the earth.”
This is one of the largest internal protests in recent years by employees of a major technology corporation against its AI policy.
The AI Backlash: Why Thousands of Amazon, Google and Apple Workers Are Saying “Stop”
Main Complaints of Employees
Threat to employment and overtimeEmployees complain that AI adoption is being used as a pretext for layoffs: recent data indicates the layoff of approximately 14,000 corporate workers, which, according to documents, is linked to the “transition to the AI era.”
One signatory notes: “AI tools don’t make our work twice as efficient—but they demanded twice as much from us.”
Breaking environmental promises
While Amazon has publicly committed to achieving net-zero emissions by 2040, employees say emissions have increased by ~35% since 2019.
At the same time, the corporation has launched a large-scale plan to build data centers for training and servicing generative models—investments in infrastructure are being deployed in regions dependent on carbon energy.
Ethical risks: surveillance, control, automation
The letter's authors demand a ban on the use of Amazon technology for "surveillance, mass deportations, or violence," an end to the mandatory use of AI by employees, and the right for workers to participate in overseeing the implementation of AI.
Why It Matters: The Broad Context of the Issues
The technology sector is currently in the spotlight due to the strong growth of generative AI, the rapid expansion of cloud infrastructure, and investments in computing power.However, the growth of data center capacity runs counter to global climate goals and puts additional strain on the energy system, particularly in regions dependent on fossil fuels.
Automation and AI assistants increase the risk of job losses, especially for mid- and entry-level positions. This is not just a technical issue, but also a matter of social stability, the environment, and corporate responsibility.
With Donald J. Trump returning to the White House and regulations (labor, climate, AI) being relaxed, protests by employees of large corporations take on added significance and risk.
What employees demand: their 4 key points
Ban on the use of "dirty" energy - all AI data centers must run on renewable energy sources or other "clean" solutions.Avoiding the imposition of AI tools – Employees do not want AI tools to become a mandatory replacement for their work tasks by default.
Banning the use of AI for surveillance, repression, and mass deportations —transparency and ethical constraints are particularly critical.
Create “ethics working groups” with ordinary employees who could influence technology implementation strategies and use AI only with their voluntary consent.
How Amazon Reacts
Company spokesman Brad Glasser said Amazon remains committed to its 2040 net-zero goal and that the company is working to increase its share of carbon-free energy and improve infrastructure efficiency.However, many employees consider these promises insufficient, as the growth of emissions in recent years and plans for a dramatic expansion of data centers are at odds with public rhetoric.
What This Means for the Industry and the General Public
For the first time in years of tech giants' massive growth, internal resistance—not from external activists, but from within the corporations themselves—is uniting and voicing concerns. This could set a trend toward corporate responsibility and democracy within the industry.If demands for responsibility to the climate, employees, and society gain momentum, approaches to AI may be reconsidered, including large-scale investments in capacity and automation.
Given the global rise of AI, pressure on jobs and climate change is not just a corporate issue but a societal one. These protests could impact regulation, legislation, and corporate strategy in 2026–2027.
The events of late November 2025—a letter from over a thousand Amazon employees and thousands of supporters from Google, Apple, and other companies—are a signal that a crisis of confidence in the "AI race" is brewing within tech giants. Workers are increasingly questioning aggressive automation and its environmental and social consequences.
This wave of protest isn't just fear for jobs. It's an attempt to set new rules: to ensure that AI technologies develop with consideration for people, the climate, and social responsibility. Whether they will influence corporate strategy remains to be seen.
This wave of protest isn't just fear for jobs. It's an attempt to set new rules: to ensure that AI technologies develop with consideration for people, the climate, and social responsibility. Whether they will influence corporate strategy remains to be seen.
By Claire Whitmore
December 03, 2025
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December 03, 2025
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All to the point, no ads. A channel that doesn't tire you out, but pumps you up.
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