Photo by Matese Fields on Unsplash.
Disclaimer - Using this discussion thread, I am not promoting paid/unpaid internships. I am not justifying right or wrong between any type of internship. I am simply trying to understand what the DEV community has to offer.
I feel there are many occurrences when students or individuals seek an internship; while pursuing education, career change, or maybe some other reason.
To my understanding, the internship is an opportunity given by the employer where the employee or an intern for a specified tenure (a month, 3-months, 6-months, or a year), where more experienced individuals mentor an intern. Some employers provide paid internships; some employers offer unpaid internships. Here are a couple of examples of how an intern position might look like in different companies. If you find some other examples, please do post them below, I will update the list.
- Google - User Experience Design Intern, 2020 - link
 - Wix - Playground - link
 - 
xcompany - Product Designer Intern 
In the mentioned examples,
- We all know, Google is a very well-settled company in the industry, financing and planning an internship is a pretty easy job for them.
 - Wix is another mid-sized company, providing an extensive and pretty informative program for a solid career headstart. Of course, that program is unpaid, but the return on investment would give a headstart to one's career.
 - In the third example, we can see a startup company working on a product that's not in the market yet. The same company is looking for an unpaid-internship where they would be treating an intern as a full-time employee, which is an excellent opportunity for an individual to get his hands dirty with real-time products.
 
I want to ask the DEV community,
- Is it okay to pursue an unpaid internship? And how would you justify an unpaid internship? How do you measure the worth of an internship?
 - And, is it ethical for an employer to hire an unpaid intern?
 - How would you convince the employer for a certain amount of pay?
 
















My point of view is, for most companies intern's are just people with raw skill that needs to be moulded, add some direction so they can set some career goals and direction for the future. So most companies and intern's take this as compensation over money. End of the day it boils down to ethics and what the company beliefs are and the beliefs of the intern as an individual.
For me personally, unpaid labour is a form of slavery. And I would rather pay something than nothing, for someone regardless if we are aren't getting much back from the intern in terms of experience.
In my experience, there are instances I have learned a great deal from intern's while mentoring / pairing. Because they add a new perspective to a problem. This is very likely because they are young (in most cases), come from a different sociao-economical background.
Interm's of the three questions you ask at the end. I think I managed to answer the first two. But the last one is purely up to the companies belief system.