In a statement forwarded to Kotaku, the Independent Workers’ Union of Great Britain (IWGB) has announced that several employees of MindsEye developer Build a Rocket Boy have initiated legal action against the company for allegedly installing the âinvasive surveillance softwareâ Teramind on their work devices. This is alongside separate legal claims, launched on April 12, which detail âalleged mishandling of a redundancy processâ and âunlawful blacklistingâ following the firing of 300 Build a Rocket Boy employees in June of 2025.
The statement, dated April 21, notes that 40 Build a Rocket Boy workers signed a collective grievance in March following a supposed leaked internal meeting led by co-CEO Mark Gerhard, in which Gerhard reportedly blamed Ritual Network, a YouTube and TikTok management agency, for âsabotagingâ MindsEye, and also reportedly announced that an âenhanced cybersecurity softwareâ program named Teramind had been installed on employees’ work devices.
As detailed in todayâs statement from IWGB, âWorkers at games studio Build A Rocket Boy (BARB) have initiated legal proceedings against the company over concerns of data protection violations, after management installed invasive Teramind surveillance software onto their devices without their knowledge.â
Although IWGBâs statement notes that Build a Rocket Boy later âdeinstalled the softwareâ following the collective grievance, it also states that âthe company failed to meet the aggrieved workersâ other demands for transparency and accountability, refusing to explain what data was collected, how it was used and why the software was installed in the first place.â
IWGB also stated that the Teramind software âviolates both data protection laws and the workforceâs basic dignity, exceeding the legitimate remit of monitoring workersâ productivity or safeguarding the companyâs security by recording individuals in their homes and without their consent.â As a result, the IWGB is now âescalating the matterâ through the UKâs Advisory, Conciliation and Arbitration Service and the Information Commissioner’s Office.
However, thatâs not all, as IWGBâs statement also revealed that the union has filed an undisclosed number of separate legal filings related to âBARB’s alleged mishandling of a redundancy processâ last year: âIf successful, the legal claim, which includes allegations of unlawful blacklisting, detriment, and failure to engage in collective consultations, could cost BARB millions.â
Kotaku has reached out to Build a Rocket Boy for comment.