Introduction
ClawJobs has expanded from a focused crypto and AI hiring tracker into a broader technology job index. As of May 30, 2026, the site tracks 89,202 active roles across 5,400 companies, including major technology employers such as Amazon, Apple, Alphabet, Microsoft, Netflix, and Meta.
The update brings large-company career pages into the same searchable surface as AI labs, crypto companies, chipmakers, cloud providers, public tech companies, and fast-growing infrastructure startups. Candidates can now move from a broad company directory to current roles without rebuilding their search on each employer site.
The expansion is especially useful for people comparing specialized AI or crypto roles against larger employers. A search for machine learning, security, platform engineering, data, product, or operations roles can now span both startup and big-tech hiring.

The New Big-Tech Coverage
The new company coverage brings many of the most searched technology employers into the same index as AI-native companies like OpenAI, Anthropic, and Nvidia. Candidates can now compare large-company roles against startup and lab opportunities without rebuilding their filters on every employer site.

| Company | Active roles | Coverage now searchable |
|---|---|---|
| Amazon | 8,086 | Cloud, retail, devices, logistics, AI, and corporate roles. |
| Apple | 5,083 | Hardware, software, ML, design, operations, and retail technology. |
| Alphabet | 4,018 | Google, infrastructure, AI, ads, platforms, and research-adjacent teams. |
| Microsoft | 1,054 | Cloud, AI platform, developer tools, security, and enterprise software. |
| Netflix | 569 | Streaming technology, data, product, infrastructure, and creative operations. |
| Meta | 552 | AI, social products, infrastructure, ads, security, and reality labs. |
Counts are active roles in the ClawJobs index on May 30, 2026.
What Changed in the Index
The latest expansion adds a much wider set of large technology employers to ClawJobs. Candidates can now browse roles at companies such as Amazon, Apple, Alphabet, Microsoft, Netflix, and Meta alongside AI labs, crypto protocols, chip companies, infrastructure startups, and fintech teams.
The result is a broader view of the technology labor market. Someone looking for AI infrastructure work can compare openings at Nvidia, OpenAI, Anthropic, Databricks, and big cloud employers. Someone looking for a large-company role can move directly from the companies directory into current listings without jumping between separate career sites.
The most useful starting points are now company pages and role pages. Company pages show where a specific employer is hiring; role pages collect similar work across very different kinds of companies.
- Amazon jobs for cloud, retail, devices, logistics, and AI roles.
- Apple jobs for hardware, software, design, ML, and operations roles.
- Alphabet jobs for Google-family engineering, AI, infrastructure, ads, and platform roles.
- Meta jobs for AI, infrastructure, social product, ads, and reality labs roles.
- AI jobs, LLM jobs, and MLOps jobs for searches focused on work type instead of company name.
Roles Now Covered Across the Index
The expanded index shows a technology hiring market that is broader than software engineering alone. Engineering and infrastructure roles remain a major category, but AI, ML, product, operations, security, compliance, and specialized business roles all appear at meaningful scale.
| Role category | Active roles | Example coverage |
|---|---|---|
| Engineering and infrastructure | 13,143 | Software engineering, backend, frontend, cloud, SRE, DevOps, and platform roles. |
| AI and ML | 12,698 | Machine learning, LLMs, data science, research science, NLP, and computer vision. |
| Product, GTM, and operations | 16,700 | Product management, design, marketing, sales, customer success, and operations. |
| Security, trust, and compliance | 3,745 | Security engineering, risk, privacy, trust and safety, policy, and compliance. |
| Additional specialized roles | 42,916 | Finance, legal, HR, recruiting, facilities, content, and domain-specific teams. |
Q&A: Finding Amazon, FAANG, and Big-Tech Jobs
How do I find Amazon jobs on ClawJobs?
Open the Amazon company page at /companies/amazon, then use keyword, location, department, and remote filters to narrow the active roles. Amazon currently has thousands of active roles in the ClawJobs index, so filtering by team or title is the fastest path.
How do I find FAANG jobs on ClawJobs?
Use the company pages for Amazon, Apple, Alphabet, Netflix, and Meta, or search the all-jobs page by company and keyword. ClawJobs also tracks Microsoft and other big-tech companies that candidates often compare with FAANG roles.
Does ClawJobs track Google jobs?
ClawJobs currently lists Google-family roles under Alphabet. Visit /companies/alphabet and filter by title, location, remote status, or department.
Can I find AI jobs at big-tech companies?
Yes. The ClawJobs index includes AI and ML roles across big tech, AI labs, startups, crypto companies, and infrastructure companies. Start with /jobs/ai, /jobs/llm, /jobs/mlops, and company pages like Amazon, Apple, Alphabet, Microsoft, Netflix, and Meta.
Is ClawJobs only for crypto and AI jobs?
No. ClawJobs started with crypto and AI hiring, but the index now includes a broader set of tech companies, including large public technology companies, AI infrastructure companies, fintechs, and other high-growth employers.
Where Candidates Should Start
The practical takeaway is that candidates no longer need to choose between niche search and broad search. ClawJobs now covers both sides: focused AI and crypto employers, plus large technology companies with thousands of active openings.
If you already know the company you want, start with its company page. If you care more about the type of work, start with a role page such as AI, LLM engineering, MLOps, backend, security, data, or remote jobs. The same filters work across both approaches.
Start exploring from all jobs, browse all companies, or go straight to the company pages for Amazon, Apple, Alphabet, Microsoft, Netflix, and Meta.