GCN reported.“I felt like there were prejudices around me, which were beyond my skills as a teacher and as a data analyst, the role I occupy today,” he said.In 2019, he said the university offered him a position teaching math. But after he worked 60 hours of the expected 100-hour job, he said the university fired him without explanation and refused to pay him for the hours he worked.He filed a lawsuit in Rome’s civil court and, on January 24, a judge ruled in his favor, requiring the university to pay him €2,500 ($2,635) for his unpaid hours and a fine of €1,500 ($1,581) for “unjustified dismissal.”In a statement issued after the ruling, Freddi said, “I was forced to sue.