
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or
In a landmark ruling from the US Federal Trade Commission, non-compete clauses in employment agreements are no longer valid and all existing non-compete clauses are null and void starting in 120 days. The government argues that non-competes stifle wages and reduce the talent pool for companies to draw from. Businesses counter that argument with the need to protect intellectual property. The ruling came after nearly 26,000 public comments. After the ruling was issued, the US Chamber of Commerce immediately filed suit, challenging the ruling and the standing of the FTC to decide it. Simliar action was expected from the National Labor Relations Board in the near future, with some saying the FTC action may have been a race to see who could get the news out the fastest.
Time Stamps:
0:00 - Welcome to the Rundown
1:00 - Supermicro Shows New X14 Servers at Intel Vision
4:46 - PuTTY SSH Security Vulnerability
7:37 - Micron to Recieve $6 Billion in Chip Funding
12:05 - BMC Set to Acquire Netreo
15:04 - IBM Closes In on Acquiring HashiCorp
18:01 - Security Exploit Targeting VMware EXSi
21:31 - FTC Bans Non-Compete Clauses
32:32 - The Weeks Ahead
35:33 - Thanks for Watching
Follow our Hosts on Social Media
Tom Hollingsworth: https://www.twitter.com/NetworkingNerd
Stephen Foskett: https://www.twitter.com/SFoskett
Follow Gestalt IT
Website: https://www.GestaltIT.com/
Twitter: https://www.twitter.com/GestaltIT
LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/Gestalt-IT
Tags: #Rundown, #FTC, #IntelVision2024, #CHIPSAct, #NonCompeteClause, @TechFieldDay, @SFoskett, @NetworkingNerd, @TheFuturumGroup, @Supermicro, @Intel, @IntelBusiness, @MicronTech, @IBM, @HashiCorp, @VMware, @Veeam,
5
33 ratings
In a landmark ruling from the US Federal Trade Commission, non-compete clauses in employment agreements are no longer valid and all existing non-compete clauses are null and void starting in 120 days. The government argues that non-competes stifle wages and reduce the talent pool for companies to draw from. Businesses counter that argument with the need to protect intellectual property. The ruling came after nearly 26,000 public comments. After the ruling was issued, the US Chamber of Commerce immediately filed suit, challenging the ruling and the standing of the FTC to decide it. Simliar action was expected from the National Labor Relations Board in the near future, with some saying the FTC action may have been a race to see who could get the news out the fastest.
Time Stamps:
0:00 - Welcome to the Rundown
1:00 - Supermicro Shows New X14 Servers at Intel Vision
4:46 - PuTTY SSH Security Vulnerability
7:37 - Micron to Recieve $6 Billion in Chip Funding
12:05 - BMC Set to Acquire Netreo
15:04 - IBM Closes In on Acquiring HashiCorp
18:01 - Security Exploit Targeting VMware EXSi
21:31 - FTC Bans Non-Compete Clauses
32:32 - The Weeks Ahead
35:33 - Thanks for Watching
Follow our Hosts on Social Media
Tom Hollingsworth: https://www.twitter.com/NetworkingNerd
Stephen Foskett: https://www.twitter.com/SFoskett
Follow Gestalt IT
Website: https://www.GestaltIT.com/
Twitter: https://www.twitter.com/GestaltIT
LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/Gestalt-IT
Tags: #Rundown, #FTC, #IntelVision2024, #CHIPSAct, #NonCompeteClause, @TechFieldDay, @SFoskett, @NetworkingNerd, @TheFuturumGroup, @Supermicro, @Intel, @IntelBusiness, @MicronTech, @IBM, @HashiCorp, @VMware, @Veeam,
1,631 Listeners
7,830 Listeners
8,594 Listeners
325 Listeners
154 Listeners
101 Listeners
11,715 Listeners
111,507 Listeners
56,163 Listeners
15 Listeners
418 Listeners