Build a Rocket Boy faces lawsuits over surveillance software

Employees at MindsEye developer Build a Rocket Boy, represented by the IWGB Game Workers Union, have launched legal action alleging the installation of invasive Teramind surveillance software on their work devices without knowledge. The union claims the software violated data protection laws by recording workers at home. This escalates from a March grievance by 40 staff and separate claims over 2025 redundancies.

The Independent Workers’ Union of Great Britain (IWGB) announced on April 21 that workers at Build a Rocket Boy (BARB) initiated proceedings over data protection violations. Management had installed Teramind, described by the union as exceeding legitimate monitoring by capturing individuals in their homes without consent. The company removed the software after a collective grievance but refused demands for details on collected data, its use, and installation reasons, according to IWGB.

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Illustration depicting Meta employee under invasive AI surveillance monitoring at work, amid layoffs and staff backlash.
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Meta tracks US employees' computer interactions for AI training amid staff backlash and layoffs

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Meta is deploying software on US employees' work computers to monitor keystrokes, clicks, mouse movements, and screenshots in work apps for AI training data. Internal memos reveal no opt-out option, sparking employee discomfort, as the company invests billions in AI while cutting thousands of jobs.

Former lead cinematic animator Chris Wilson has detailed alleged mismanagement, unauthorized surveillance, brutal crunch, and leadership rifts at Build a Rocket Boy's MindsEye studio. His Kotaku interview amplifies ongoing worker grievances and sabotage claims amid multiple layoffs, as covered in prior reports on the studio's turmoil.

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Build a Rocket Boy, developer of the struggling open-world shooter MindsEye, has laid off roughly 170 of its 250 staff—its third round of redundancies in the past year—leaving around 80 employees, sources tell Kotaku. The cuts follow two prior rounds, the March 2026 closure of its French studio, and come amid poor reception to a recent Blacklist update.

Developers of the gacha RPG Duet Night Abyss have apologized for a cybersecurity incident that distributed malware to players' PCs via a launcher update on March 18. The malware, identified as Trojan:MSIL/UmbralStealer.DG!MTB, targets passwords and cryptocurrency. Players receive in-game compensation as the team implements security enhancements.

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Bluesky faced intermittent service disruptions on Monday, which the company attributed to an upstream service provider. Many users quickly blamed the issues on developers' use of AI-assisted 'vibe coding' tools. The outage sparked widespread memes and criticism on the platform.

Meta has ended its outsourcing contract with Kenyan firm Sama on April 30, 2026, leaving over 1,100 workers jobless. The move follows February reports and a March class-action lawsuit alleging privacy breaches from Sama workers reviewing sensitive footage from Meta's Ray-Ban smart glasses. Sama disputes the claims, while Kenya's data watchdog investigates.

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Chicago-based game studio Iron Galaxy has laid off dozens of employees as it adapts to changes in the gaming industry. The announcement follows the release of the Tony Hawk’s Pro Skater 3 + 4 remaster collection. A source indicated the cuts could affect up to 90 staff members.

 

 

 

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