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The Morning After: Pressure on Activision Blizzard CEO to resign grows

Engadget

We reported on employees calling for Activision Blizzard boss Bobby Kotick's resignation earlier this week in TMA, but pressure continues to mount. Alongside more than 800 Activision Blizzard employees and contractors that have signed a petition calling for CEO Bobby Kotick to be removed, there have been responses from both the head of PlayStation, Jim Ryan, and Microsoft's Phil Spencer. In a memo obtained by Bloomberg, Spencer reportedly said he and other leaders at Xbox are "disturbed and deeply troubled by the horrific events and actions" that reportedly took place at Activision Blizzard and that Microsoft was "evaluating all aspects" of their relationship with the game publisher. Bloomberg sources claim Apple is now shifting its attention to a fully self-driving car, not just a more conventional vehicle with semi-autonomous features. New project leader Kevin Lynch wants the very first model to drive itself, according to sources.

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Shareholders call on Activision Blizzard CEO to resign after employee walkout

The Guardian

The embattled boss of video game company Activision Blizzard is facing a shareholder rebellion one day after employees staged a walkout to protest the company's response to sexual misconduct allegations at the firm. "In contrast to past company statements, CEO Bobby Kotick was aware of many incidents of sexual harassment, sexual assault and gender discrimination at Activision Blizzard, but failed either to ensure that the executives and managers responsible were terminated or to recognize and address the systematic nature of the company's hostile workplace culture," a group of shareholders, led by the Strategic Organizing Center (SOC) Investment Group and holding a total of 4.8m shares, wrote in a letter shared on Wednesday with the Washington Post. In addition to demanding Kotick's resignation, the shareholders called for the board's two longest-serving directors, Brian Kelly and Robert Morgado, to retire by the end of the year. The letter follows a report in the Wall Street Journal on Monday that claimed Kotick had been aware of some of the sexual misconduct behavior at the company for years. That report came on the same day that 110 employees walked out of the company's Blizzard Entertainment headquarters in Irvine, California, after Kotick had described the Journal report as misleading in a video message distributed to employees.