{"id":296454,"date":"2022-01-21T14:45:39","date_gmt":"2022-01-21T20:45:39","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/jbsgame.com\/?p=296454"},"modified":"2022-12-12T14:01:33","modified_gmt":"2022-12-12T20:01:33","slug":"activision-blizzard-lawsuit-timeline-industry-ceo-bobby-kotick-report","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/jbsgame.com\/activision-blizzard-lawsuit-timeline-industry-ceo-bobby-kotick-report\/","title":{"rendered":"Activision Blizzard: a brief timeline of everything, from the lawsuit to now"},"content":{"rendered":"
One of the biggest stories of this year has been the investigation of Activision Blizzard and its internal workplace culture. What started with a lawsuit filed by the California Department of Fair Employment and Housing has escalated as employees, shareholders, and executives have responded to reports coming out of Activision Blizzard.<\/p>
With the most recent round of reports prompting another walkout, petitions, and a response from the likes of Sony’s Jim Ryan and Microsoft’s Phil Spencer, I thought it would be a good time now to look at how we got here. This will be a brief timeline, tracking everything from the initial DFEH filing to today. We’ll be working to keep it updated moving ahead too, as new developments occur. We’ll be tracking our own coverage, as well as the reports from other outlets.<\/p>
So let’s go back to earlier in 2021, to see how this all kicked off.<\/p>
Activision Blizzard is sued by the California Department of Fair Employment and Housing<\/a>, as the result of a two-year investigation from the agency, citing allegations of harassment, discrimination, and a toxic workplace culture.<\/p> Blizzard executives J. Allen Brack and Fran Townsend address the suit in internal memos<\/a>. (Townsend’s letter was later found to be written by Kotick<\/a>.)<\/p> Activision Blizzard employees sign a letter<\/a>, declaring leadership’s response to the lawsuit “abhorrent and insulting.”<\/p> Employees organize a walkout<\/a> and also set forth demands, including a removal of required arbitration and new practices for recruiting, hiring, and promoting.<\/p> Activision Blizzard CEO Bobby Kotick calls the company’s response to lawsuit “tone deaf”<\/a> and promises “swift action.” Employees respond to the letter<\/a>, highlighting several demands that were not addressed.<\/p> Ubisoft employees, who “no longer trust” Ubisoft management to address lingering issues from issues brought to light the year prior, file their own letter calling for change<\/a>. In it, they specifically reference the worker response at Activision Blizzard: “We need real, fundamental changes within Ubisoft, within Activision Blizzard, and across the industry.”<\/p>