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Abstract:The survey was conducted by Blind, a popular app among workers at Silicon Valley companies such as Amazon, Uber, and Facebook.
One-third of Amazon employees polled in a new survey expect the company's website to crash during Prime Day this year.
Amazon's website experienced a series of glitches for hours last year on Prime Day that prevented some users from accessing the site during the 36-hour event.
The survey was conducted by Blind, a popular app among workers at Silicon Valley companies such as Amazon, Uber, and Facebook.
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Some Amazon employees are predicting that the website will crash again this year during Prime Day, according to a new survey by the social-networking app Blind.
Amazon's website experienced a series of glitches for hours last year on Prime Day that prevented some users from accessing the site during the 36-hour event. Amazon is kicking off this year's Prime Day event on Monday, and it will last 48 hours.
Blind, a popular app among workers at Silicon Valley companies such as Amazon, Uber, and Facebook, asked its users last week whether Amazon would experience an outage again during Prime Day.
One-third of respondents who work for Amazon said they expected the site to crash, according to the survey.
Read more: Tesla employees are complaining that the company is trying to block Blind, an anonymous app for talking about your company — here's how it works
By comparison, 60% of eBay-employed respondents expected a crash, along with nearly half of Walmart-employed respondents and 42% of Wayfair-employed respondents.
Blind said it ran the survey from July 3 to 5, and more than 4,222 users of its app responded. Users could answer only once.
Blind verifies employment of its users by requiring them to verify their accounts using their work email addresses.
Disclaimer:
The views in this article only represent the author's personal views, and do not constitute investment advice on this platform. This platform does not guarantee the accuracy, completeness and timeliness of the information in the article, and will not be liable for any loss caused by the use of or reliance on the information in the article.
By Elizabeth Culliford and Sheila Dang (Reuters) -Facebook parent Meta Platforms Inc
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