Technology | Facebook Google Pays Engineer $3.5M Not to Go to Facebook Competition heats up, as Google employees eye IPO-bound companies By Kevin Spak Posted Nov 12, 2010 11:28 AM CST Copied In this photo made July 13, 2010, a Google worker rides a bike at the company's headquarters in Mountain View, Calif. (AP Photo/Paul Sakuma) How desperate is Google to prevent its employees from bolting for Facebook? So eager that it just paid an engineer a whopping $3.5 million in restricted stock to turn down an offer from the social networking giant, sources tell Tech Crunch. It’s the latest and most staggering of Google’s attempts to keep employees from jumping to competitors that haven’t had their IPOs yet. In an earlier reported case, an engineer who’d been making $150,000 a year turned down a 15% raise and $500,000 in restricted stock, and headed to Facebook anyway. (Click here for the story of another ex-Googler.) Read These Next Colbert tells audience it's curtains for his Late Show. Rare cancer claims a former Super Bowl champ. This is why you don't wear metal in MRI rooms. Sources say Trump's card to Epstein was signed in a strange place. Report an error