Apple and Twitter have joined the ranks of tech companies decrying the abrupt halt on a range of guest worker visas proclaimed yesterday by President Trump. The new restrictions would fall particularly hard on H-1B visas, which are often used by tech companies to hire foreign workers without engaging a traditional immigration process.
Tim Cook is ‘deeply disappointed’ by Trump guest worker ban
Twitter called the order ‘short-sighted’
Twitter called the order ‘short-sighted’


Capped at 80,000 visas nationally, the program is highly competitive, although it remains controversial for keeping workers’ immigration status tied to their ongoing employment. A recent US Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) survey found that tech companies accounted for roughly two-thirds of the total visas granted under the designation.
In a statement on Twitter, Apple CEO Tim Cook emphasized the benefits both his company and the nation at large have reaped from immigration.
Twitter also joined the chorus, calling the proclamation “short-sighted” and “deeply damaging.”
A number of former H-1B recipients in the tech community have also come forward about their personal connection to the program. Coursera co-founder Andrew Ng said the order “will shatter dreams and disrupt lives.”
“As a former H1B visa holder,” Ng continued, “my heart goes out to all the families affected.”
Instituted as a response to skyrocketing unemployment, Trump’s order primarily curtails the issuing of new work visas, so visitors whose H-1B status has already been approved shouldn’t be affected, although it may affect H1-B holders currently outside the country. However, the proclamation also leaves significant leeway to individual consular officers, who will have broad discretion in choosing whether to issue a visa to an individual applicant.
Most Popular
- Our long national sunscreen nightmare is almost over
- Kaleidescape’s movie player blows streaming, and your wallet, away
- Barret Zoph is out at OpenAI again after just five months
- Midjourney goes from generating cat images to full-body ultrasound scans
- Hue’s wired wall modules bring non-smart lights into its ecosystem











