November layoffs:
~Tech giant Meta, Facebook's parent company, is laying off more than 11,000 employees, or 13% of its 87,000-strong workforce.
~Barclay's and Citigroup both cut staff: Barclay's laid off about 200 employees in its banking and trading units, and Citigroup laid off about 50 traders.
~Real-estate platform Redfin laid off 13% of its workforce – 862 people, according to CNN – and shut down its home-flipping unit. It's the second round of layoffs for the company since June.
~Software giant Salesforce laid off hundreds of employees, according to CNBC, and might lay off up to 2,500, Protocol reports.
~Google Cloud partner Sada laid off 11% of its workforce, a move announced by CEO Tony Safoian in a LinkedIn post.
~Barclays and Citigroup join other investment banks in trimming staff, laying off 200 and "dozens" of employees, respectively.
~San Francisco-based Zendesk, a customer-support software platform, has laid off about 350 employees, or 5% of its workforce.
~Twitter laid off roughly 50% of its 7,500 employees, the company's head of safety and integrity confirmed. CEO Elon Musk said they were offered three months of pay as severance.
~Warner Bros. Pictures, the movie-making arm of Discovery, is cutting an undisclosed amount of employees, according to Bloomberg.
~Affirm, a San Francisco-based "buy now pay later" platform, laid off an unspecified number of employees, according to posts by LinkedIn members.
~Lyft is cutting its workforce for the second time this year, reports the Wall Street Journal, laying off 13% of its employees, approximately 500 people.
~Digital bank Chime is laying off about 160 people, or 12% of its staff, according to TechCrunch.
~Digital payments giant Stripe is cutting 14% of its workforce, CEO Patrick Collison wrote in a staff memo. The layoffs affect more than 1,000 employees, according to Bloomberg.
~Hootsuite, a Canada-based social media management platform, cut 5% of its staff, its second round of layoffs since August.
~Real-estate platform Opendoor is laying off about 550 employees, 18% of its workforce, a move announced by CEO Eric Wu in a blog post.
~Database management giant Oracle laid off as many as 200 employees in its Oracle Cloud Infrastructure unit on Nov. 1, a week after "quietly" laying off workers in another cloud division, according to Business Insider.
~San Francisco-based software management platform Gem laid off about 100 employees, or one-third of its workforce, according to affected LinkedIn members.