KEY POINTS
  • Amazon posted, and later removed, two job listings for intelligence analysts that would be charged with tracking "labor organizing threats" and other "sensitive topics."
  • An Amazon spokesperson told CNBC in a statement that the listings were "not an accurate description of the role."
  • The company has faced widespread criticism over its labor practices before and during the coronavirus pandemic.
Amazon workers at Amazon's Staten Island warehouse strike in demand that the facility be shut down and cleaned after one staffer tested positive for the coronavirus on March 30, 2020 in New York.

Amazon was looking to hire two intelligence analysts charged with tracking "labor organizing threats" inside the company, which drew criticism from activists and news outlets and caused it to take down the job listings on Tuesday.

The company recently posted job listings for a senior intelligence analyst and an intelligence analyst, both based in Phoenix, Arizona, that would be part of its Global Security Operations' Global Intelligence Program, according to the posting. The analysts would be charged with gathering information on any internal and external threats to Amazon and reporting the data to leaders across the organization.