Chris Jarvis, 25, thought he would be shadowing a staff developer as an unpaid intern last year at Sony Computer Entertainmentâs Cambridge studio in the U.K. When he showed up, he says he was ordered to test games instead.
Forgive me for finding that kind of servitude, well, Dickensian. Jarvis didnât think it was funny, either, and âpolitely informedâ his employers that this role entitled him to the U.K.âs national minimum wage, reports The Independent. When he still wasnât paidâand Jarvis said he worked a 9:30 to 6 pm shift for three monthsâhe reported the company to U.K. authorities and sued for his unpaid wages. Jarvis reasoned that the testing job he did would pay someone ÂŁ100 a day and SCE Cambridge (now Guerilla Cambridge) took advantage of his intern status to save itself some cash.
Not only did Sony settle the case for ÂŁ4,600 (ÂŁ1,000 more than Jarvis demanded) they asked that he sign a gag orderâand he flatly refused. And still got his money. So keep that in mind if youâre ever in a situation where some corporation is paying you money to go away.
Jarvisâ lawyer reminds that, in the U.K. a voluntary worker may only be employed for no pay by âa charity, a voluntary organization, an associated fund-raising body, or a statutory body.â Even voluntary workers at a commercial company are entitled to minimum wage.
Update: Jarvis himself has replied in the comments below to provide additional context on his work agreement and situation.
Unpaid intern who sued Sony awarded ÂŁ4,600 [The Independent via Joystiq]
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