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E-commerce giantAmazon.com, IncAMZN recently started with the 9,000layoffs which were previously announced.

In terms of job cuts, Amazon, like many companies, has undergone periodic restructuring and workforce reductions.

According to areport, the company will likely complete the fresh round of job cuts by late April, bringing the total job cut number to 27,000 positions. It announced 18,000 layoffs In November of last year. Still, Amazon remains the second-largest employer in the U.S.

However, the company has also faced criticism for its treatment of warehouse workers and contractors, including concerns about low wages and poor working conditions.

Business Insider hasreportedon the salaries of engineers, scientists and other employees before the round of layoffs at the company.

According to the report, a business intelligence department business analyst draws a salary of $69,826 – $130,000. Business intelligence engineer draws close to$45,282 – $58,094 a year.

Here's a further breakdown of what Amazon paid their employees in various departments, according to BI.

Operations Research Analysts

Ads Account Manager I: $62,982 – $85,000

Ads Account Manager II: $89,107 – $120,000

Program Manager II: $88,275 – $117,000

Program Manager III: $104,374 – $160,000

Software Developers, Applications

Software Development Engineer I: $72,384 – $154,000

Software Development Engineer II: $101,754 – $174,636

Software Developers, Systems Software

Professional Services II: $86,382 – $195,000

Business Intelligence Analysts

Business Analyst I: $58,094 – $92,000

Business Analyst II: $78,562 – $105,000

Business Intelligence Engineer I: $58,094 – $126,900

Business Intelligence Engineer II: $78,562 – $145,300

Sales Engineers

Technical Business Developer III: $160,000 – $180,800

Software Developers, Applications

Enterprise Account Engineer I: $67,995 – $128,160

Enterprise Account Engineer II: $75,629 – $185,000

Enterprise Account Engineer III: $89,045 – $205,800

Front-End Engineer I: $74,734 – $150,000

Front-End Engineer II: $90,750 – $200,000

IT App Development Engineer I: $67,995 – $135,000

IT App Development Engineer II: $91,874 – $150,000

Manager III, Software Development: $130,894 – $185,000

Manager III, Technical Program Management: $111,176 – $140,920

Product Manager III – Technical – MBA: $144,000 – $160,110

Senior Manager, Software Development: $123,614 – $167,710

Software Development Engineer I: $59,717 – $180,000

Software Development Engineer II: $87,485 – $225,000

Software Development Engineer III: $109,138 – $261,500

Business Intelligence Analysts

Business Analyst I: $38,958 – $110,000

Business Analyst II: $53,102 – $143,000

Business Analyst III: $67,267 – $155,000

Business Intel Engineer I: $38,958 – $155,000

Business Intel Engineer II: $67,621 – $182,000

Business Intel Engineer III: $89,835 – $196,000

Data Engineer II: $78,562 – $195,000

Data Engineer III: $154,545 – $198,000

IT Support Engineer I: $26,770 – $66,934

IT Support Engineer II: $57,138 – $78,562

Manager III, Business Intelligence: $99,008 – $178,400

Manager III, Business Intelligence Engineer: $85,155 – $212,000

Read Next:Should You Be Worried About Job Cuts At Goldman, Amazon Or Salesforce? One Important Caveat

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Sports

Deion announces he battled, beat bladder cancer

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Deion announces he battled, beat bladder cancer

BOULDER, Colo. — University of Colorado football coach Deion Sanders announced Monday that he had undergone surgery to remove his bladder after doctors discovered a tumor there. Sanders said, since the surgery, there are no traces of cancer, and he will continue to coach this season.

In a packed Touchdown Club in the Dal Ward Athletic Center, Sanders appeared with Dr. Janet Kukreja, director of urological oncology at University of Colorado Cancer Center, and answered some of the questions that have swirled around him throughout the offseason.

The 57-year-old Sanders has largely been out of the public eye in recent months, save for an appearance at Big 12 media days earlier this month when he acknowledged Big 12 commissioner Brett Yormark for repeatedly checking in on him and praised Colorado athletic director Rick George.

Sanders deflected questions about his health at Big 12 media days and previously had not publicly offered any specifics. In July his son, Deion Jr., posted a video on social media in which Deion Sanders is heard saying he was dealing with a health issue and that “I ain’t all the way recovered.”

In the video he was seen stepping into an ice bath as well as shooting a basketball and a walk with his daughter. Sanders said in May he had lost about 14 pounds as he had limited contact around the program during the team’s spring and summer workouts.

Sanders has previously dealt with serious health issues. He has had bouts with blood clots in his legs, had two toes amputated in 2022 and emergency surgery in June 2023 to treat the persistent clots, including one in his thigh in one leg and several just below his knee in his other leg.

On the field, Sanders is set to begin his third season at the school. With his son, Shedeur, at quarterback and Heisman Trophy winner Travis Hunter, college football’s most accomplished two-way player in the modern era, the Buffaloes finished 9-4 last season with an Alamo Bowl appearance. Sanders’ son Shilo, a safety for the Buffaloes for the past two seasons, has also moved on to the NFL, along with several high-profile players on offense.

The top storyline on the field for the Buffaloes is the battle to replace Shedeur behind center. In two seasons, Sanders completed 71.8% of his passes for 7,364 yards with 64 touchdowns.

It will be the first season Deion Sanders doesn’t coach a high school or college team with Shedeur at quarterback.

Seventeen-year-old true freshman Julian Lewis, a five-star recruit and No. 2 player in the 2025 ESPN 300, and Kaidon Salter, who started 24 games in four seasons at Liberty, will compete for the job.

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Sports

Guardians’ Clase on leave over gambling probe

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Guardians' Clase on leave over gambling probe

Cleveland Guardians closer Emmanuel Clase on Monday was placed on non-disciplinary paid leave through Aug. 31 as part of Major League Baseball’s investigation into sports gambling, the second Guardians pitcher to be caught up in the inquiry.

Guardians right-hander Luis Ortiz remains on non-disciplinary paid leave after originally being placed there July 3 after unusual gambling activity on two pitches he threw for balls, sources told ESPN. Ortiz’s leave was later extended to Aug. 31.

In a statement, the Guardians said “no additional players or club personnel are expected to be impacted” by the investigation. The investigation, a source confirmed, has not turned up information tying other players with the team to sports gambling.

Clase, 27, is a three-time All-Star and two-time winner of the Mariano Rivera Award as the best relief pitcher in the American League. He finished third in AL Cy Young voting last year when he posted a 0.61 ERA over 74.1 innings. In 47.1 innings this season, Clase has a 3.23 ERA and has already allowed more hits this year (46) than last (39) while striking out 47 and walking 12.

His ties to the investigation that started following a June 27 alert from IC360, a firm that monitors betting markets for abnormalities, are unclear. Sportsbooks and gambling operators were alerted after a spike in action on Ortiz’s first pitch in the bottom of the second inning against the Seattle Mariners on June 15 and in the top of the third inning against the St. Louis Cardinals on June 27, according to sources. In both cases, unusual amounts of money were wagered on the pitches being a ball or hit-batsman from betting accounts in New York, New Jersey and Ohio, according to a copy of the IC360 alert obtained by ESPN. Both pitches wound up well outside the strike zone.

At the All-Star Game in mid-July, MLB commissioner Rob Manfred said while he still supports legal gambling because of the transparency regulation offers, he was concerned about so-called microbets, such as ones that offer action on individual pitches.

“There are certain types of bets that strike me as unnecessary and particularly vulnerable,” Manfred said. “I know there was a lot of sports betting, tons of it that went on illegally and we had no idea, no idea what threats there were to the integrity of the play because it was all not transparent,” he added. “I firmly believe that the transparency and monitoring that we have in place now, as a result of the legalization and the partnerships that we’ve made, puts us in a better position to protect baseball than we were in before.”

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Politics

Big brands are sleepwalking when it comes to stablecoins

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Big brands are sleepwalking when it comes to stablecoins

Big brands are sleepwalking when it comes to stablecoins

With Amazon and Walmart exploring stablecoins, institutions may be underestimating potential exposure of customer data on blockchains, posing risks to privacy and brand trust.

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