Samwise High Tech Recruiting Newsletter
Wednesday, May 6, 2026
Big Tech’s $725B AI Splurge Is Being Funded by Mass Layoffs
Google, Amazon, Microsoft, and Meta collectively plan to spend $725 billion on capital expenditures in 2026 — a 77% jump from the previous year’s record $410 billion. Meanwhile, those same companies have slashed nearly 80,000 jobs in the first quarter alone. Amazon cut 16,000 corporate roles while posting AWS growth of 24%. Oracle eliminated up to 30,000 positions, roughly 20% of its global workforce. Meta announced 8,000 cuts effective May 20. Microsoft offered voluntary retirement to 8,750 US employees. Analysts now say human salaries are the only cost flexible enough to be redirected toward AI infrastructure fast enough to matter.
Comments (0)Meta’s 8,000 Job Cuts Launch May 20 as AI Restructuring Reshapes the Company
Meta will begin laying off approximately 8,000 employees on May 20, accounting for 10% of its 78,865-person workforce, with additional cuts planned for the second half of 2026. The restructuring, announced via internal memo from HR head Janelle Gale, is structural rather than performance-based. Teams across Facebook, Instagram, WhatsApp, and central operations will be reorganized into AI-focused “pods” reporting into the Applied AI organization. Meta has simultaneously cancelled 6,000 open roles. The company is spending $115 to $135 billion on AI infrastructure in 2026, nearly double its 2025 capex, including a $27 billion joint venture for a gigawatt-scale AI data center in Louisiana.
Sources: The Next Web · Axios
Comments (0)Oracle Workers Say They Were Made to Train the AI That Replaced Them
Oracle has laid off nearly 30,000 employees — roughly 18% of its global workforce — since the layoffs began on March 31, 2026. Reporting by TIME magazine adds a disturbing dimension: before the terminations, management required workers to document their processes in detail, ostensibly to improve internal systems. Those documented workflows were used to train AI systems that have since taken on their tasks. Employees in the US, India, Canada, and Mexico received termination emails with no advance warning from HR or direct managers, effective immediately. Oracle has disclosed a $2.1 billion restructuring plan while posting a 95% jump in net income last quarter.
Comments (0)Greenhouse Acquires Ezra AI Labs to Combat AI Application Surge
Greenhouse, one of the leading applicant tracking system providers, has agreed to acquire Ezra AI Labs, a voice-based conversational AI interviewing startup. The deal is expected to close in Q2 2026. The acquisition directly addresses a crisis in modern recruiting: applications per recruiter on Greenhouse have increased 412% since 2023, while fewer than 7% of applicants now receive an interview. Ezra uses structured voice conversations to screen candidates, helping employers identify genuine talent in a market flooded with AI-optimized resumes. Founded in 2024 and backed by a16z Speedrun, Ezra integrates with existing ATS systems. The acquisition underlines the accelerating arms race between AI-generated applications and AI-powered screening.
Sources: PR Newswire · Recruiting News Network
Comments (0)Amazon Cuts 30,000, Then Announces Plans to Hire 11,000 Engineers
Amazon cut approximately 30,000 corporate roles across late 2025 and early 2026, representing one of the largest tech workforce reductions in recent memory. This week, AWS CEO Matt Garman announced plans to hire 11,000 software developers and engineers in 2026. Garman defended the earlier cuts, arguing that AI is changing the nature of software roles rather than eliminating the need for engineers. Routine debugging and code snippet generation will increasingly be handled by AI agents, freeing developers for architecture and complex problem-solving. Amazon’s AWS division posted 24% revenue growth in Q1 2026, its fastest pace in 13 quarters, underscoring the company’s continuing demand for specialized technical talent.
Sources: People Matters · Analytics Insight
Comments (0)New Grads Face Worst Tech Job Market in Decades
Computer science graduates are entering the worst tech job market in decades. New grads now account for just 7% of tech hires, down from 15% before the pandemic — a drop of more than 50% since 2019. Recent graduate unemployment in CS hit 6.1% in early 2025, worse than during the 2008 financial crisis, and the outlook for the Class of 2026 is similarly grim. While starting salaries remain strong at $81,535 — up 7% year-over-year — actual hiring volume has not recovered. Employers are targeting specialists over generalists, requiring AI fluency even for entry-level roles, and bypassing traditional campus recruiting programs in favour of experienced talent.
Sources: Final Round AI · Robert Half
Comments (0)AI Engineer Salaries Rise 7% in Q1 2026, Senior Roles Hitting $310K Base
AI engineers are commanding some of the highest salaries in technology, with base pay ranging from $145,000 to $310,000 and total compensation at senior levels regularly exceeding $400,000 in major US markets. The national senior median for AI engineers stood at $230,625 as of early 2026, and Q1 data shows a 7% increase from 2025 averages. The market remains severely supply-constrained, with roughly three open positions for every qualified candidate. LLM fine-tuning specialists earn 25 to 40% above generalist ML engineers, while AI safety and alignment expertise commands a 45% premium compared to 2023 rates. Total compensation packages increasingly weight equity at 40% or more of overall value.
Sources: Kore1 · Axiom Recruit
Comments (0)Skills-Based Hiring Reshapes Tech Recruitment as Degree Requirements Fall
The dominant shift in tech recruiting in 2026 is the move to skills-based hiring. Employers are deprioritizing degrees and traditional credentials in favour of validated, job-ready capabilities. Even entry-level IT roles now routinely require basic prompt engineering skills, and candidates who can demonstrate AI fluency are seeing faster hiring timelines. According to Robert Half’s 2026 Technology Hiring Trends report, demand remains strongest for cybersecurity architects, cloud engineers, and AI/ML specialists — all areas where the skills gap is widest. New grads who develop deep specializations rather than broad generalist profiles have significantly better hiring outcomes. The shift also benefits workers from non-traditional education backgrounds entering the field.
Sources: Robert Half · GoodTime
Comments (0)Curated by JD · samwise.agency

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