
Stay away, companies say.
James Martin/CNET
If you visit Apple’s Cupertino, California, campus, a cylinder set amid trees, bushes and walking paths, you might notice it seems a little quieter. The same goes for Twitter’s offices in typically busy downtown San Francisco, or Facebook’s massive open-office-plan buildings in Menlo Park.
Across Silicon Valley, companies are telling employees to work from home and avoid the open-office plans, gourmet meals and other perks that have become a staple of the tech world.
Apple CEO Tim Cook sent a letter to staff around the world encouraging them to work from home until March 13, Bloomberg reported over the weekend. He called the coronavirus outbreak an “unprecedented event” and a “challenging moment.”
Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella said he’s committed “to making public health our top priority,” encouraging employees in the Seattle and San Francisco areas to stay home until March 25. Other companies such as ride hailing company Lyft, business social network LinkedIn, chipmaker Intel and HP have made similar moves.
And Facebook has cancelled its F8 developer conference in San Jose, just down the road from its headquarters, citing concerns about the virus. “This was a tough call to make,” Konstantinos Papamiltiadis, Facebook’s director of developer platforms and programs, said in a statement last month.
The moves come as fear about the virus, first detected in China last year, spreads across the globe. Tens of thousands of people have tested positive for COVID-19, the official designation for the novel coronavirus. Researchers say it appears to be much deadlier than the flu, which itself kills tens of thousands of people in the US each year. The coronavirus appears to particularly threaten the sick and elderly.
In response, large tech conferences like Facebook’s F8, SXSW in Texas, Google I/O in California and Mobile World Congress in Barcelona were cancelled. Texas Sen. Ted Cruz and Arizona Rep. Paul Gosar put themselves in quarantine after being exposed to the virus at a political gathering, and at least two cruise ships, including one in San Francisco, have been held away from ports after initial tests indicate sick people were on board.
Cities and states are taking dramatic action as well. San Francisco has banned “non-essential group events” at any city-owned facilities until at least March 23, local CBS affiliate KPIX reported. The Los Angeles Times, meanwhile, reported its home city has increased funding for tests amid outbreaks there.
“We have to be prepared. We have to protect the well-being of our loved ones and our neighbors,” Los Angeles Mayor Eric Garcetti said last week.
Where this all will lead is unclear. Countries are still testing patients as the virus spreads. Meanwhile, lawmakers and administrators in cities and counties around Seattle and New York are encouraging companies to allow employees to work from home if they can.
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