HomeNewsTrends'RIP Bengaluru tech scene': Founder eyes Chennai after Karnataka cabinet approves job quota

'RIP Bengaluru tech scene': Founder eyes Chennai after Karnataka cabinet approves job quota

The startup founder, who hails from Chennai, said he spent 10 years in Bengaluru, building his business. 'I actually identify myself more with Bengaluru... Me, my wife and kids everyone is fluent in Kannada, that being said, I am 100 percent against imposition of a language on anyone--be it Hindi on Kannadigas or Kannada on immigrants,' he said.

July 18, 2024 / 12:30 IST
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As the comment blew up on the internet, the founder shared another post a few hours later clarifying his stand. (Image credit: Grapevine)
As the comment blew up on the internet, the founder shared another post a few hours later clarifying his stand. (Image credit: Grapevine)

The Karnataka government has been receiving severe backlash from industry leaders for approving a draft bill guaranteeing 50 percent reservation for locals in management jobs, 70 percent in non-management categories. Several business leaders have strongly criticised the move. Joining them is one anonymous start-up founder whose comment on the social media platform, Grapevine, has gone viral for pointing out that the "Kannada only" sign would be Bengaluru's knell as a tech leader.

In a self-professed rant, user Informal Tool, who hails from Chennai and spent 10 years building his business in Bengaluru, said the recent government's decision might make them consider moving his business to Chennai.

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"Global tech giants aren't here for our dosas. It's the diverse talent pool, genius. Now you want to slap a "Kannada Only" sign on it?" he wrote.  "We're already bleeding talent to Hyderabad and Pune. This? This is handing them our workforce gift-wrapped. I've spent a decade building my company here. Now I am eyeing Chennai."

"RIP Bangalore tech scene, 1990-2024. Cause of death: linguistic chauvinism and political myopia," he added.

As the comment on a news discussion board blew up on the internet, the founder shared another post a few hours later clarifying his stand.