For what it’s worth, what you’re describing at Google is consistent with my reading of the prediction. I read it as “Google continues to widely allow remote work, no questions asked”. If, as of the resolution date, Google was still allowing people to work from home without special approval, that sounds like “allowing remote work, no questions asked”, even if it is not a permanent state of affairs. If there’s some process for officially requesting permission to work from home, but it is approved by default, that still seems positive to me but not as clearly positive.
It is ambiguously-worded, so I can see why people are saying it’s wrong, but to me the default reading resolves positive based on what Google employees are saying.
For what it’s worth, what you’re describing at Google is consistent with my reading of the prediction. I read it as “Google continues to widely allow remote work, no questions asked”. If, as of the resolution date, Google was still allowing people to work from home without special approval, that sounds like “allowing remote work, no questions asked”, even if it is not a permanent state of affairs. If there’s some process for officially requesting permission to work from home, but it is approved by default, that still seems positive to me but not as clearly positive.
It is ambiguously-worded, so I can see why people are saying it’s wrong, but to me the default reading resolves positive based on what Google employees are saying.