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Censorship

The Repercussions of Blogging 571

hende_jman writes "How much should you be allowed to say in a public blog? There's an article on CNN that looks at different situations in which people have been fired for blogging about their company. The main issue brought seems not to be one of a lack of trust (blogs, after all, are most often public), but rather a lack of policy outlining repercussions for negative blogging about one's company."
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The Repercussions of Blogging

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  • Remember when... (Score:2, Interesting)

    by Anonymous Coward
    Slashdot had editors not named Zonk?

    Anyway, don't blog anything you wouldn't say on TV.
    • What you should and should not say is not changed by blogging. There is no real difference to making a public statement by any means, including blogging, newspapers, TV etc.
  • by Anonymous Coward on Sunday March 06, 2005 @08:45PM (#11861834)
    It's about the companies rights. They can fire you for whatever reason they like.

    It's a two way street, you can leave whenever you want, and the company can leave you.

    Stop this bellyaching about your freedom. You don't have the "right" to keep your job.
    • Unless you work for;

      * a university
      * a govt department
      * CIA
      * military
      * church
      * a CEO
      * family business

      Yes, its real hard to get sacked there.

      Treat your employment like you would a soviet era workplace. All public comments should be under false names/nicks otherwise you'll get 'thrown of a bridge' ;-)

    • It's a tad bit different for "civil servants" in the U.S. They have some constitutional protections from being fired without due cause. You can be fired, but it has to be for cause.
      • by ShieldW0lf ( 601553 ) on Sunday March 06, 2005 @09:35PM (#11862117) Journal
        I believe this extends to private companies in Canada. Unless they have due cause, they can't just fire you. They can lay you off because they don't need you anymore, but if they're caught re-hiring someone with your skill set in the immediate future after laying you off, they're fucked.

        You see a lot of jobs up here that are just under 35 hours a week up here, because part-time employees don't recieve the same protections. Instead of 3 employees working full time, you hire 4 to work 30 hrs a week and you can screw them over to your hearts content.

    • by ScrewMaster ( 602015 ) on Sunday March 06, 2005 @08:51PM (#11861873)
      Um ... yes, under many conditions you do. The Federal Government isn't much concerned about that, but the States certainly are. A wrongful firing suit can cost a company a lot of money. So don't assume, as an employer, that you have the right to terminate any employee, at any time, for any reason. For that matter, so far as blogs are concerned there are laws to protect whistleblowers. Still ... if you dislike your employer enough to want to badmouth them in public you should probably just look for another job and be done with it.
  • by Anonymous Coward on Sunday March 06, 2005 @08:46PM (#11861837)
    Blogging is just a different form of communication; the same rules still apply. An employee wouldn't tell a newspaper that people should buy the company's stocks because its doing well. Same applies to blogging: say whatever you want to say about your personal life, what you ate this morning, or whom you hate so much...just don't say any sensitive info.

    duh?

    • Same applies to blogging: say whatever you want to say about your personal life, what you ate this morning, or whom you hate so much...just don't say any sensitive info.

      Unless the person you hate so much is your boss. ;-)
    • by maynard ( 3337 ) on Sunday March 06, 2005 @09:00PM (#11861938) Journal
      From the article:

      "In 1997, blogging pioneer Cameron Barrett lost a job at a small marketing firm in Michigan after co-workers stumbled upon "experimental" short stories from his creative writing class on his site. Now, he's much more cautious, and he suspended his blog while campaigning for Wesley Clark during the Democratic presidential primaries."


      Yes, employment is "at will". Does that mean that employers should have the write to fire an employee for publishing a novel written on personal time? Or should society place limits on employers rights to fire employees over off work hours speech unrelated to their job? Personally, I think giving employers the right to squelch employees by threat of arbitrary termination hands them a bit too much power. What you say (unrelated to work) on your own time is your own business and not that of the employer. JMO. --M
    • It's "different" because Joe Trippi and a few other blowhards had the news media going hook, line, and sinker; it's the part of the Howard Dean mania that continued past the scream.

      Gee, we've had opinion and news websites for years.

      I have an account on a journal service and never update.
    • Blogs are PUBLIC (Score:3, Insightful)

      by gidds ( 56397 )
      Exactly.

      Maybe the real problem here is people who assume that because only a couple of close friends talk to them about their blog, that they are the only people who read it. Or, more importantly, the only people who can read it.

      Whether it feels so or not, a blog is public. Anyone can read it. That includes your boss, your MD, your legal department, your colleagues, your parents, your partner -- in short, any and all of the people you criticise, insult, or slander. If you wouldn't wish any of those

  • Well, duh. (Score:5, Funny)

    by rah1420 ( 234198 ) <rah1420@gmail.com> on Sunday March 06, 2005 @08:46PM (#11861839)
    My blog (full of cobwebs) are stories about me, not my employer. I'd fully expect to be fired if I told the story about

    NO CARRIER
  • This one's easy (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Capt'n Hector ( 650760 ) on Sunday March 06, 2005 @08:46PM (#11861840)
    If you've signed a NDA or any other legally binding agreement that compells you to STFU about a particular subject, then you're not allowed to talk about that subject, be it to your family around the dinner table or to the world via a blog. Seems pretty simple...
    • by ABeowulfCluster ( 854634 ) on Sunday March 06, 2005 @08:51PM (#11861877)
      And from a scene at 'Career Day' at the elementary school:

      So, what do you do?

      I'm an engineer at leading Search Engine Company.

      So.. how's your job.

      I'm sorry, but I'm not at liberty to discuss that.

      Is there any subjects people should study if they want to work at Google?

      I cannot confirm nor deny that I work at Google. As for subjects to take, I cannot divulge any technolgy which may or may not be employed in my work.

      Do you like your job?

      Sorry ma'am, don't ask don't tell.

      • by Tim Browse ( 9263 ) on Sunday March 06, 2005 @09:19PM (#11862047)
        Joke away, sparky - I once went to an interview like that at Logitech. We were paired off with existing employees for an informal chat about their jobs. The guy I got worked in the space eqpt division at Cambridge(?) and wasn't allowed to tell me anything about his work :).

        He did say he enjoyed it though.
    • I don't know if this is universal, but in the jurisdictions with which I'm familiar, an NDA is not required. Any employee has an automatic and implicit responsibility to take reasonable precautions to ensure that trade secrets and other confidential information doesn't become public.

      So even if you haven't signed an NDA, you're still expected not to disclose stuff that you know to be proprietary.
    • Re:This one's easy (Score:5, Interesting)

      by renehollan ( 138013 ) <[rhollan] [at] [clearwire.net]> on Sunday March 06, 2005 @11:56PM (#11862833) Homepage Journal
      I once had a late stage job interviewer where the interview wanted to see samples of code I had written.

      "You're kidding, right?"

      "No, why?"

      "Well, all the code I've written for other employers is owned by them. It would be improper for me to disclose it. I have written GPL code for some of those employers, but they did not distribute binaries to me so I can't disclose that either.

      I understand that you probably want to see if I can "cut the mustard", right?"

      "Duh!"

      "Then give me a coding task that should take, oh, a week or two. I'll likely get some working code back to you in 48 hours. We can even do some refinement cycles in that week, to see how flexible I am, and how open to expandability my designs are."

      "You're hired!"

      "No review of my code first?"

      "No, not necessary! Anyone that bold must know their stuff!!"

      "O.K. Put an offer in writing. I've got a plane to catch."

      Later...

      Wife: "So, you gonna take the offer?"

      "Not unless it's so good that I could stand to work for idiots who don't even check my creds. Sheesh!!"

      Yes, I would have sent them a custom sample of code -- even assigned rights to them: they took the time and effort to fly me in and intervew me, after all: worth a KLOC or two. No, I will not work for people that don't check their final cut interview candiate's skills. I have been known to turn down jobs on the basis of the incompetence of the people interviewing me. I have been known to accept jobs precisely because the interviews were "tough" and the interviewers sharp.

      • Well color me clueless. I thought that in the current job market you could not be an egotistical software engineer, since there is no shortage of engineers. This story sounds like something from the 1990s.

        But perhaps it is just that I am a humble mortal of minimal skills and this is why I have this impression.

  • by Anonymous Coward on Sunday March 06, 2005 @08:46PM (#11861842)
    lack of common sense by the blogger.
  • by saskboy ( 600063 ) on Sunday March 06, 2005 @08:47PM (#11861843) Homepage Journal
    The possibility of having one's blog data mined by identity theives, or your family's enemies is something to keep in mind when writing too. If you wouldn't want your Grandmother discussing what you're talking about, it's probably a better idea to vent verbally to a friend [as long as you don't know Linda Tripp], than to put your rant into writing for potentially hostile people to read.
  • Rules (Score:5, Insightful)

    by orangeguru ( 411012 ) on Sunday March 06, 2005 @08:48PM (#11861852) Homepage
    1. Never fuck anyone from the office.
    2. Never blog about your work either.
    • Re:Rules (Score:3, Insightful)

      by bonch ( 38532 )
      These rules are common sense to you and me. But apparently to some, this story belongs in the Your Rights Online category. Sorry, but I don't have the "right" to bitch about my company publicly and then expect to keep working there. Sigh.
      • by mcc ( 14761 ) <amcclure@purdue.edu> on Sunday March 06, 2005 @10:16PM (#11862304) Homepage
        CNN mentions the guy who got fired from google for blogging.

        What they don't mention is that the guy who got fired from google for blogging seems to have been violating SEC regulations by publicly posting certain information relating to Google's financials...

        Common sense really needs to become an issue at some point.
    • Re:Rules (Score:5, Funny)

      by flyingsquid ( 813711 ) on Sunday March 06, 2005 @09:14PM (#11862024)
      1. Never fuck anyone from the office. 2. Never blog about your work either.

      Waitaminit- are you saying I should NOT have used my blog to post photos of me and the bosses' daughter at it on top of the copy machine?

    • Re:Rules (Score:2, Funny)

      by glomph ( 2644 )
      Rule number 3: Don't get caught breaking rule number 1 or rule number 2!
    • Re:Rules (Score:4, Funny)

      by kinema ( 630983 ) on Sunday March 06, 2005 @10:05PM (#11862256)
      3. Definitely never blog about who you fuck in the office.

      Obligitory Seinfeld reference:
      In the boss' office.

      Boss: I'm going to get right to the point. It has come to my attention that you and the cleaning woman have engaged in sexual intercourse on the desk in your office. Is that correct?

      George: Who said that?

      Boss: She did.

      George: Was that wrong? Should I have not done that? I tell you I gotta plead ingnorance on this thing because if anyone had said anything to me at all when I first started here that that sort of thing was frouned upon, you know, cause I've worked in a lot of offices and I tell you peope do that all the time.

      Boss: You're fired.
  • policy? (Score:5, Insightful)

    by csimicah ( 592121 ) on Sunday March 06, 2005 @08:49PM (#11861862)
    This isn't kindergarten... nobody should need a 'policy' to tell them that if they badmouth their employer in public (or otherwise reflect badly on them), they're not going to be welcome at work for much longer.

    It's called 'biting the hand that feeds you', and it's never a particularly smart idea.
    • Just like soviet russia and nationalistic parties germany, 'you must love your leaders or you vill die!!'

      Ive always said corporations are just like mini communist nations, non-elected leader with its circle of generals and its spies.
      • Re:policy? (Score:4, Insightful)

        by M.C. Hampster ( 541262 ) <M...C...TheHampster@@@gmail...com> on Sunday March 06, 2005 @09:12PM (#11862006) Journal

        Ive always said corporations are just like mini communist nations, non-elected leader with its circle of generals and its spies

        Wow, you're right. They are so smiliar. Heck, they are pretty much the same thing. Oh yeah, except they can't execute you. Oh, and they pay you for all the work you do for them. And you can leave the company whenever you want, while many communist nations will severly punish those trying to escape. Yeah, other than that, they are totally the same!!!1one.

    • Re:policy? (Score:4, Interesting)

      by laughingcoyote ( 762272 ) <barghesthowl.excite@com> on Sunday March 06, 2005 @10:19PM (#11862322) Journal

      Please don't tell me that a corporation "feeds" me. I make them a fair trade-I do my work for them on their terms for a certain number of hours a day, and they pay me a set amount of money for those hours. Once I go home, they are not obligated to continue paying me for the hours I spend there, so why should they have any say in what I say or do with them?

  • Public discourse (Score:5, Insightful)

    by BWJones ( 18351 ) * on Sunday March 06, 2005 @08:51PM (#11861876) Homepage Journal
    The problem of course is that blogs are accessible world wide and can potentially reach a much larger audience than if you were simply talking to friends about how crappy your company is. To some extent, the fired employees deserve some of the blame as they would have to realize the potential implications of posting the information they did, but this IS the problem with technologic advancement. There are always teething problems associated with new technologies being used within existing methodologies and communication paradigms. The trick is, always be careful of what you say and be willing to take the heat for it......even if it is on a personal blog that might be accessed by hundreds, or thousands of individuals. I am always amazed at the traffic my blog [utah.edu] receives for a non-commercial ( I would rather keep it commercial free), personal site. Articles like my What is the iPod are some days getting a hundred hits or more from all over the world, so one should expect that some attention may come your way even with what you may consider minor posts.

  • by adolfojp ( 730818 ) on Sunday March 06, 2005 @08:52PM (#11861880)
    Before we continue with this discussion, I propose that we wrap Jefferson's remains in a dynamo. Then, when he starts rolling around in his grave, we can all benefit from this endless free power resource.

    Cheers,
    Adolfo
    • by Leo McGarry ( 843676 ) on Sunday March 06, 2005 @08:59PM (#11861932)
      Um. Before you continue this discussion, I propose that you spend a little time reading what Mr. Jefferson actually wrote. Then you might realize that if he were here today, he'd say that the constitutionally guaranteed freedom of speech is not a get-out-of-jail-free card. The fact that the government does not prohibit you, or anyone else, from saying whatever you want doesn't mean that your words won't have consequences, consequences up to and including the loss of your job.

      Jefferson was a lot bigger on personal responsibility than you seem willing to give him credit for.
  • Who is responisble (Score:3, Interesting)

    by flopsy mopsalon ( 635863 ) on Sunday March 06, 2005 @08:59PM (#11861928)
    I think part of the issue here is people have this perception of the so-called "internet" as a sort of anything-goes space of freedom where ordinary rules of human conduct are relaxed. People on-line say the most outrageous things and have access to images and descriptions of extreme situations and behavior that you would never see in real life.

    In reality, the internet is just a bunch of computers linked together. But what happens is people only concentrate on the wild stuff and the exhortations of so-called "freeedom" advocates who push the internet as some sort of intellectual wild west or something, and they do things like spread work gossip or post naughty pictures of themselves in their work uniform. Then they get fired.

    I think we all share some of the blame for this and need to be more thoughtful about what we say and do online. Remember, the next time you link to goatse, it could cost someone their job.
  • Blogging policies (Score:5, Insightful)

    by tongue ( 30814 ) on Sunday March 06, 2005 @09:01PM (#11861949) Homepage
    Most companies do have them.

    They're called NDA's.


  • not comments, that's for sure...
  • by cwikla ( 557137 ) on Sunday March 06, 2005 @09:05PM (#11861971)
    I go through alot of resumes.
    With the advent of blogging, I can't believe:

    1. The number of people who give a link to their website on their resume
    2. Have a blog
    3. Refer to themselves negatively in their blog :
    "I couldn't find the motivation to get out of bed".
    "I'm a loser, I can't find a job".
    "I just don't feel like working".

    Hey, let's call these people...
    • by gentlewizard ( 300741 ) on Sunday March 06, 2005 @10:09PM (#11862273)
      The one case where I can see putting a blog on a resume, is if it's professionally related and the traffic is a testimonial to others' opinions of your expertise. I know people with database-focused blogs that's be crazy not to list their blogs as credentials.

      But then, they don't use their blog to wail and gnash their teeth about their personal lives, either.
  • by nysus ( 162232 ) on Sunday March 06, 2005 @09:09PM (#11861991)
    If I started handing newsletters out on the street corner that had articles about the inside dirt about my company, could I be fired? Of course I could and with good justification. Corporations are under no obligation to uphold the First Amendment. (And that's one big reason I'm against privatization of government services.)

    Blogs are simply a more efficient means of communicating a message, nothing more. Why is this even controversial?
    • Damn...the first time in a month I don't have mod points to give. Your post should be modded to "+20, Required Reading Followed By A Quiz".
    • by Brandybuck ( 704397 ) on Sunday March 06, 2005 @09:46PM (#11862181) Homepage Journal
      Corporations are under no obligation to uphold the First Amendment.

      Non sequitur.

      No one but the *government* is under any obligation to uphold the first ammendment, because it is only the government that the first ammendment applies to. Let me quote: "Congress shall make no law..." The Bill Of Rights is not a universal document, rather it is a set of restrictions upon the government, and only the government.

      And why are you picking on corporations? Your observation applies to all non-government groups, regardless of corporate status. Heck, it even applies to your *spouse*. Tell your wife she's a whore, and expect all your marital benefits to immediately cease.
  • Gentle Bunny (Score:4, Insightful)

    by rah1420 ( 234198 ) <rah1420@gmail.com> on Sunday March 06, 2005 @09:11PM (#11862005)
    Mildly offtopic, but it does reflect on the blogsphere a bit. (Did I just use that word?)

    I am a gentle employee bunny.

    1) I am a gentle bunny. I will listen carefully before I speak. In so
    doing I might get some faint clues from my manager as to who is going to
    get screwed next, and so take steps to make sure I am not in the penumbra of
    blame when it happens.

    2) I am a gentle bunny. I will think before I speak. I will make very
    sure I don't violate my employer's non-disclosures or talk about the stock
    during blackout periods. Nor will I reveal what I know about management's
    little hobbies. I will remember that my employer is *not* a gentle bunny, but
    is part wolf, part rat, and part Emperor Palpitine; and his lawyers are
    even worse.

    3) I am a gentle bunny. I will remember that when I speak I can hurt
    others. Will what I say cause others pain? Will they take it out on me in
    my next review?

    4) I am a gentle bunny. Can I change the way I say something to avoid
    hurting another yet still say it? I will strive to remember that in these
    situations, precise factual accuracy must give way to the survival instinct;
    it's a lot more important not to tick them off.

    5) I am a gentle bunny. The things I love are not loved by all. I will not
    force the things I love onto others. Not even if it is honesty, decency,
    and fiducial responsibility, and the people lacking these things are thereby
    risking jail time.

    6) I am a gentle bunny. If I wish to show others the things that I love I
    will check with those present in case they do not wish to be involved.
    This is especially true when I am comtemplating whistleblowing.

    7) I am a gentle bunny. I will accept any gift freely given, yet I will
    never ask for a free gift. The last time I did, I was fired, and I learned
    from that.

    8) I am a gentle bunny. I will remember that though I may not love
    something, that does not mean another may not love it. Everyone has their
    own take on these things, and just because I don't like fraud, doesn't
    mean the CEO isn't into it bigtime.

    9) I am a gentle bunny. I will listen and think on everything a person
    says, not just the parts I wish to fight with or the parts with which I
    already agree. If I find that everything presented is utter fantasy and
    absurdity, I will still carefully consider that this is, after all, my
    employer, and that in fantasy one may sometimes find humor, especially in
    schedules.

    10) I am a gentle bunny. What I believe in is important to me. I will
    remember that what others believe in is important to them. And if they
    believe that lying to the employees is important, then I will remember
    that "gentle" is not the same as "gullible".

    11) I am a gentle bunny. Another person may hold dear to their heart a
    view that contradicts mine. This does not mean that their view or mine is
    wrong for each may be the right choice for each of us. After all, there
    are no ethics in my workplace, so how can there be right and wrong
    choices?

    12) I am a gentle bunny. I will remember that words hurt worse and longer
    than blows. I will remember that this is occasionally useful, and is
    frequently the only response which is both legal and rational.

    13) I am a gentle bunny. If someone speaks to hurt me, have I given them
    cause? Is there something I have said or done that has caused them pain?
    Probably not; they probably weren't doing it intentionally, and simply
    wounded me in blithe, unconcerned self-interest. They are, after all,
    management.

    14) I am a gentle bunny. If I find myself wanting to hurt someone to make
    my point, I will look at what I am saying to see what is lacking in my
    view that I must harm another that they might agree? And if what is
    lacking is a modicum of intelligence in the other party, I will nonetheless
    remember that punching out the mentally enfeebled is neither gentle nor
    • by myowntrueself ( 607117 ) on Sunday March 06, 2005 @10:37PM (#11862390)
      That was a true classic.

      If it wasn't so long, I'd print it in blood on rabbit hide and nail it too the wall of my cubicle.

    • One day, me and a couple of co-workers were out having a smoke, watching the gentle bunnies graze. And along comes this big cat (siberian maybe?), scares the bunnies away and _literally_ goes and uses one bunny hole as a toilet. Hey, I suppose it beat digging her own hole for that.

      Basically just because you're a gentle bunny, doesn't mean that the others will leave you alone.

      "If someone speaks to hurt me, have I given them
      cause? Is there something I have said or done that has caused them pain?
      Probably not
  • Meanwhile... (Score:3, Informative)

    by kureido ( 830125 ) on Sunday March 06, 2005 @09:14PM (#11862023)
    Ellen Simonetti's blog [journalspace.com], mentioned in the CNN article as having "suggestive photographs of [her] in uniform," dies a slow horrible death...
  • First, there are protections for whistleblowers. Unless it happens to companies, Government agencies, ...

    Second, labor laws vary from State to State - South Carolina believes in "employment by will", which (given that all they employers seem to belong to one gigantic Satantic cult) really boils down to slave labor for slave wages. On the other hand, States with better protections generally pay better, have better standards of living, have more jobs in areas like Technology, generally have mass transit and

  • There are outlets. (Score:5, Interesting)

    by gellenburg ( 61212 ) <george@ellenburg.org> on Sunday March 06, 2005 @09:20PM (#11862052) Homepage Journal
    This is precisely why I started http://www.novoice.org/ [novoice.org].

    To provide an outlet for those who are afraid to speak out about their jobs.
  • by Anonymous Coward on Sunday March 06, 2005 @09:29PM (#11862091)
    Some people say bad things about my COmpany, but not me. My boss is an absolute saint, and my coworkers are knowledgable about software and increDibly talented. really I feel blessed, in that I have a job for life, and my stock purchase plan can only increase in value.

    People are sometimes envious, and ask me how i was lucky enough to leverage my skills into an exciting company like SCO, to which I reply, "I'm just lucky, I guess!"
  • by grant murray ( 698896 ) <email@grantmurray.com> on Sunday March 06, 2005 @09:37PM (#11862126)
    I believe that if you discover that your employer is:
    • unethically exploiting employees
    • conducting business in an illegal manner
    • killing people in the course of business
    • about to kill people in the course of business
    • conducting business in a non-competitive, monopolistic fashion
    you are morally bound to speak out about it, on your blog, to the press and to whomever will listen. (If your employer is a Chinese mining company, you should just quit your job and become a full-time blogger.)
  • by MatthewNewberg ( 519685 ) on Sunday March 06, 2005 @09:48PM (#11862190) Homepage
    If a company doesn't like you I would understand they could fire you. Part of your job is to make the company money, and you can't do that by causing harm to the companies image. What I am really interested is in relation to blogging and school. If someone goes out and blogs a bunch of information about how a school sucks (which I think could happen quite a lot) is the students education and freedom of speach be protected. I feel this is much more interesting considering the fact the student is not employeed by the school, but the school is employeed by the student.
  • Digital Ghosts (Score:4, Insightful)

    by Sundroid ( 777083 ) on Sunday March 06, 2005 @09:52PM (#11862204) Homepage
    The CNN article can be distilled down to a couple of chilling sentences: "Annalee Newitz, a policy analyst at the civil liberties group Electronic Frontier Foundation, said employees often 'don't realize the First Amendment doesn't protect their job.' The First Amendment only restricts government control of speech. So private employers are free to fire at will in most states, as long as it's not discriminatory or in retaliation for whistle-blowing or union organizing, labor experts say."

    The problem with blogging is that the words are documented. An employee can badmouth about his company or chat up the company's trade secrets in private settings and probably get away with it, but if he types those gripes or company secrets into his computer and hits the "publish" key, then he'd better realize that those words are permanently stored in a server, and the possibility that they might come back to haunt him is there.
  • by erroneus ( 253617 ) on Sunday March 06, 2005 @11:07PM (#11862553) Homepage
    We just don't like the vulnerability we feel when other people have it too.

    I find it interesting how little people see of the big picture -- the world centering around themselves so often yields such a limited perspective. I've brought the comparisson of western (by which I actually mean U.S.A.) society to eastern (by which mean Japan) society to illustrate an alternative way of thinking and considering things. Because the two societies are so different, it grants an opportunity to see how other people do things... a chance to see how things might be if they were different here.

    The issue about "blogging" is really no different than if it were discovered that you were talking to a reporter about your company or, for that matter, if your boss overheard you at a dinner conversation. If you're unhappy with things at work, it is an embarassment for the people you work for to have you go around telling people how you feel. While I'm sure they wish they had a better recourse such as violent retaliation against your family or the ability to erase the memories of those to whom you have spread your filth about the company, firing is just about the only weapon they can wield.

    In Japan, I think it is pretty well accepted that people will talk. They talk a lot. And what's more, people often worry about it so much that they do everything in their power to avoid anyone saying anything negative about themselves. This is a key motivator for many of the "positives" we see in Japanese society... if you've ever been there, you'd recall that they are patient, kind and generous to a fault. (At least, that was my experience.)

    It is also often said that asian women usually don't become obese like western women very often do. Many people attribute this to their dietary habits, which I will agree helps, but if you don't think they love them burgers and fries, that pizza and spaghetti, you name it, then you'd be very wrong. So why? Because they don't want people talking about how fat they are!!!!! So they simply do what it takes to avoid it.

    Again, it's the shame and embarassment issues that are motivators more than just about anything else. Here, it's simply bad manners to notice if someone is a fat pig and has unusually large breasts for a man. And if you SAY anything about it, it's on you! So the stigma is on the speaker rather than on the object of the speech.

    This is not usually the case in blogging, however -- the stigma goes to the object. So what are we to do as a society? Should we, the people, embrace our freedom of speech by making allowances for the fact that it is simply unavoidable? Should we, the businesses of the U.S.A., defend our public image with litigation and termination or through kindness and generosity?

    One thing is certain -- we, the people, are pretty damned short-sighted much of the time and care only about pleasing ourselves... this is pretty true about we, the businesses of america too... a damned shame isn't it?

    I think civics and social studies should be very emphasized in our schools now more than ever. (And they shouldn't graduate unless they can pass a U.S. Citizenship exam.) The kids will know, most of the time, if they are being lied to anyway -- so even being taught lies could be of value.
  • Sounds like people are getting dooced [urbandictionary.com].
  • Good sense (Score:4, Insightful)

    by yuri benjamin ( 222127 ) <yuridg@gmail.com> on Sunday March 06, 2005 @11:40PM (#11862744) Journal
    It's good sense not to dis your employer in public.
  • *NEWSFLASH* (Score:4, Insightful)

    by Lonath ( 249354 ) * on Monday March 07, 2005 @12:06AM (#11862868)
    I've figured out three simple rules about this wacky IntarW3b thing that help guide me when posting things online.
    1. Everything you post will be there forever.
    2. Everyone will eventually know who you are.
    3. Anyone who cares will eventually read what you post.


    Seriously, do people think that because there's a new and easy way of updating their websites (which is all that blogs are...simplified website management) that somehow they magically get a +5 Shield of I Can Say Whatever The Fuck I Want Without Repurcussions? Blogga, please.
  • by edward.virtually@pob ( 6854 ) on Monday March 07, 2005 @01:25AM (#11863173)
    1. be anonymous or use an alias
    2. avoid using personally related specifics
    3. be ready to accept the consequences of being id'd

    bloging about where you work in your own name breaks all three of these.

    fwiw, an interesting historical fact is that the founding fathers used aliases when submitting letters to the colonial newspapers advocating revolution against england -- for obvious reasons. these days most newspapers will not accept letters without verification of identity, which is one reason online commentary is more popular and expresses more risky opinions.
  • Hmm (Score:4, Insightful)

    by Chanc_Gorkon ( 94133 ) <<moc.liamg> <ta> <nokrog>> on Monday March 07, 2005 @02:02AM (#11863287)
    I can see being fired for a lewd picture taken in the workplace. I can see being fired for revealing a hot new product on the web. I can see being fired if you revealed other corporate secrets on your blog but I cannot see why the Queen of the Sky was fired. First off, the pictures on the blog don't even reveal to me that she worked for Delta. So what that she showed a bit of cleavage. I have seen more cleavage when the attendent was serving my drink! Maybe we do need to revisit the first amendment. It should be allowed for you to state your opinion of your boss on your web page....just don't reveal his name! ;)
  • So CNN is jumping on the bandwagon of scaring bloggers. The Washington Post did it last month. See the latest in my "media desperately trying to ignore bloggers" series, Wash Post desperately trying to scare bloggers [underreported.com]. Actually, we can see that the mainstream media has now progressed from the ignore phase to the badmouth phase (analogous to Microsoft's behavior toward Linux).

    Regardless that the risk of losing a job is real, the CNN and Washington Post stories fail to mention the benefits to society of news blogs like mine that highlight the relevance of buried stories, and even break stories from time to time.

    The press is supposed to be acting as the unofficial fourth branch of the U.S. government, to keep the other three in check. This is eloquently summarized in a 2002 6th Circuit Court decision [findlaw.com]:

    In our democracy, based on checks and balances, neither the Bill of Rights nor the judiciary can second-guess government's choices. The only safeguard on this extraordinary governmental power is the public, deputizing the press as the guardians of their liberty.(1) "An informed public is the most potent of all restraints upon misgovernment[.]"
    Grosjean v. Am. Press Co., 297 U.S. 233, 250 (1936). "[They] alone can here protect the values of democratic government." New York Times v. United States, 403 U.S. 713, 728 (1971) (per curiam) (Stewart, J., concurring).

    [...] [Footnote 1] A draft of the First Amendment specifically referred to the press as "one of the great bulwarks of liberty." New York Times v. United States, 403 U.S. 713, 716 (1971) (per curiam) (Black, J., concurring).

    If the mainstream media were doing its job to serve society, it would picking up the stories from blogs rather than trying to scare bloggers. The bloggers are the ones on the front lines defending democracy, not the mainstream media. The mainstream media is interested only in defending its bottom line. (Which actually -- at least for those that are publicly traded -- they are required by law to do. How did we end up with such laws that strike at the heart of the First Amendment?)

    The mainstream media is scared. After the tenth anniversary of Yahoo!, they haven't figured out yet what to do with the Internet. In a desperate bid, the Washington Post just bought Slate -- a marriage as divine as AOL/Time Warner. Here are two quick suggestions for any mainstream media moguls who happen to be reading this:

    1. Provide deep links to primary source documents like the bloggers do (court decisions, legislative bills, corporate press releases, etc.)
    2. Allow the readership to vote stories up to the front page. (Advanced: provide for affinity groups, in the manner of Amazon.)
    It's not that simple, of course. The mainstream media is afraid of losing access to information sources who also happen to be subjects of news stories from time to time -- e.g., the White House. There is also probably a bit of old-fashioned snobbery, that they're here to tell us the news, not to give us primary sources nor to let us participate in editorial decisions.

    The first mainstream media outlet that can leverage its brand, overcome these hurdles, and embrace the nature of the Internet (namely, linking and collaboration) stands to make a financial killing while simultaneously living up to their charge by the founding fathers of being our "guardian of liberty."

  • by CherniyVolk ( 513591 ) on Monday March 07, 2005 @05:53AM (#11863869)

    I'm ex-Navy (US Navy). One thing I noticed while serving was a distinct reaction us "smurfs" had when "kahkis" (officers and chiefs) were present. Neither group could relax. Relax in the sense of lowering formalities, we continued to show the exact same military bearing and the excessive drinking didn't start till the cheifs and officers left. I learned, that there is good reason to seperate your social life and your professional life and gaurd this seperation fiercly.

    Companies enforcing their regulation beyond the scope of their assets (workspace as far as I'm concerned) is both ignoble, and if it's not illegal it should be.

    Instead of companies accepting the fact they are increasingly subject to public opinion (Internet, blogs, free communications to Hong Kong etc.), they prefer to oppress us and fire those that pop off hints that investors and share holders might not have known. I bet companies wouldn't like it one bit if I told them that if I am to abide by their corporate policy, on my free time, then they should pay me the overtime ontop of my salary for 24hrs work per day; 7 days a week, 52 weeks a year. Microsoft wouldn't even last long with employee pay being that high!

    I very much disagree with the extortion these companies are pushing onto the workers. But, there is a precedent that the companies might use.

    I'm a government worker. I hold a clearance. I'm not paid 24/7 all year round to... maintain my clearance... however, I gladly do so becuase I work for the government and the nature of my job. It's complicated I suppose, here's the difference in another way... I gladly pay taxes to support my government, but I do not want to live under the thumb of a corporate monopoly. That's the best way I can put it. Companies are different, and they are in NO position to enforce their policies on me while I'm not on the clock.

    I say that every person that works for any public company should open up a blog. Every one of us, and talk about our work on our blogs. They CAN'T fire the entire work force, even if they tried the government would step in and settle matters.

    Watch out, here comes Big-Business!

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