Workplace Privacy - IBM Hot, Lilly Not 393
Brahmastra writes "Reuters has posted an article about the best and worst companies for workplace privacy, passing on information from the forthcoming issue of Wired Magazine, and IBM comes out on top. How does your workplace compare?" According to the summary, Eli Lilly was rated "the most notorious Big Brother boss", after "...its invasive background checks of workers after Sept. 11, 2001, some of which led to dismissals."
Just fine (Score:5, Funny)
My employer is pretty good when it comes to workplace privacy and freedom. Afterall, they don't seem to mind me reading Slas
Re:Just fine (Score:3, Interesting)
now, having said that, my company is very good about protecting my
As far as they know I only use ssh (Score:2)
They're ignorant...
ssh home_squidhost -L 3128:127.0.0.1:3128
Mozilla->Edit->Preferences->Advanced->Proxies->
I call it my tunnel-O-porn, but seriously, I don't need them snarfing my slashcookie.
No privacy at work (Score:5, Funny)
Lilly (Score:3, Informative)
At least they're an equal opportunity privacy violator, as happy to spill the beans on their customers [essential.org] as their employees. People just have no respect for corporate consistency these days.
Go Big Blue! (Score:5, Interesting)
Good job, IBM!
ikeya
Re:Go Big Blue! (Score:2, Funny)
It all adds up: while they're not watching what their employees are doing, their employees are contributing things to Linux that are getting them sued by SCO.
Er... is what SCO might say...
Karma (Score:2)
I applaud IBM these days for all it has done but don't forget what it was like back in the early days when IBM was that big evil co that invented the term FUD and tried to crush anything that even remotely threatened it.
Keep it up IBM and you'll get that Karma Bonus and realize that having positive karma is a good thing.
Not Big, but still very Blue (Score:5, Interesting)
Then their business model fell apart. No more near monopoly on computers. They couldn't even control the "IBM-compatible" market. They were in deep trouble, and somebody realized that their arrogant corporate culture was a big part of the problem. So they hired a new boss [ibm.com] from outside the industry, and retooled everything, from the way people worked together to their overreliance on proprietary technology. Worked out well. That which does not kill you, yada yada.
Re:Go Big Blue! (Score:5, Interesting)
They don't have internet police (well they do have a proxy and you WILL be canned for visiting certain websites), but still I would think common sense applies to ALL internet activities at EVERY company. I think the difference with IBM is they are smarter about collecting employee info and activities and make it pretty non-obvious when they use it against employees. They are also smart about keeping turn over low in HR.
They log *everything* and they just don't cite that info directly when laying people off, they just have en-masse layoffs every few years.
Re:Go Big Blue! (Score:4, Informative)
If you do something obviously stupid, and people see and complain, you will get looked at. But remember, if someone is doing something like looking a p0rn at work and the workplace doesn't take action, then the employer becomes liable for creating a "hostile" workplace.
Contrary to a lot of public percerption, IBM is very liberal. The phrases "open-door policy" and "an equal day's work for an equal day's pay" both were coined by Watson. We've recognized same-sex unions for years, had company anti-discrimation policies long before it was the expected thing to do. I know I sound like a raving fanboy, and I'll be the first to admit that IBM also has its share of large company bureaucratic BS, but the important things which make my job pleasant on a human level are always done well.
Re:Go Big Blue! (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Go Big Blue! (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Go Big Blue! (Score:2, Insightful)
IBM (Score:2, Funny)
Especially thier legal department. You just don't fuck with IBM....
Re:IBM (Score:5, Interesting)
But the levels of privacy made many things difficult and ultimately proved a factor in why I left. Information on salaries, expectations, and how you compared to others were confidential to the point where it was hard to tell where you were. The Personal Business Commitments (PBCs) program that would determine your variable pay (Read: bonus counted as your salary) was obfuscated and it was impossible to see the metrics behind the scores. Pay levels were discussed in closed rooms in whispered voices and it was verboten to speak of possible career advancing points. The thing that pushed me over the edge was learning that a college hire made more money than me even though my experienced dwarfed him (and I had graduated with a similar major).
Ultimately yes, privacy at IBM was a good thing, but brought with it just as many evils.
IBM (Score:3, Informative)
Of course they can't spy on you, you are't allowed to do anything. FACT: Leaving a single penny (or any change) in your desk at IBM is considered a security violation because someone seeing it may make them want to steal it, and they wish to keep an honest person honest.
Re:IBM (Score:2, Interesting)
They did expect all items to be locked in a drawer when you leave your desk (even for lunch), and there was a limit on personal photographs that could be placed on one's desk.
Re:IBM (Score:2, Interesting)
In truth, they did not spy on us, but I had to open my laptop bag every day going in and out of the building so that security could check the serial number on it. And I had to secure my laptop on the table with a weird cable. And I couldn't/shouldn't work from home. And they wanted to take away my company car.
So, I left...
Overstated a bit (Score:5, Interesting)
It's a pain, but you adjust quickly. I have a locked drawer on my desk. End of the day, everything paper on my desk goes in my desk. The next day, stuff comes out as I need it. Every coupla months, the drawer gets full. And all that semi-sensitive stuff goes en-masse to the confidential recycling bin. Clean office, and no slip-up's from double stakcing papers, etc...
Re:Overstated a bit (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Bullshit. (Score:2)
opt out (Score:5, Interesting)
How can you voluntarily sign on to a law? Does that imply I can opt out of the laws I don't like?
Re:opt out (Score:4, Informative)
Frankly, I'm not surprised a major drug company scrutinizes it's employees more closely than Sears does.
Re:opt out (Score:2)
Re:opt out (Score:3, Funny)
My vote is for the Law of Gravity. No! Wait...Conservation of Energy... mmmmmmm perpetual motion...No Wait! Inertia! Yea!
Re:opt out (Score:2)
If you're a Canadian province you can [ualberta.ca].
Publishing Vaporware (Score:5, Insightful)
So.. This is a comment about a comment about an articl.. Oh forget it..
Geoffeg
Re:Publishing Vaporware (Score:2)
Re:Publishing Vaporware (Score:2)
Re:Publishing Vaporware (Score:2)
So let's see.. This is an article about an article about an article that hasn't been published yet? Awesome..
No kidding. After checking all the links, all I came up with was SCO news [wired.com] and Darl (Rawhide) McBride practicing horticulture and his Dirty Harry imitation at the same time. Shooting penguins indeed. Feeling lucky Darl?
Somewhere, The PR Guys Are Smiling (Score:2, Funny)
Is Reuters trying to pump up Wired sales? (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Is Reuters trying to pump up Wired sales? (Score:3)
The main reason I have a subscription is that dragging my monitor, keyboard and mouse into the bathroom was getting old :)
I expect no privacy at work. (Score:4, Insightful)
Honestly, my time at work is for working. I know that's not a popular view with some, but it really comes down to asking yourself what you use your time for.
If you're comfortable with your boss knowing what sites you're looking at and he's comfortable with you looking at them, then there's no problem.
But to *expect* privacy I think is assuming you have a different relationship with your boss/company than you do: they're paying you to be there and do a job, and whatever means they take to ensure they're getting their money's worth is reasonable.
With all that said... I did post this from work.
Re:I expect no privacy at work. (Score:5, Interesting)
look I work, my time at work is for work, but there should be a level of privacy, even at work.
I think it is reasonable for the work place to relize you have a life outside of work, and sometimes the to cross.
The Radical Right Took Your Privacy Circa 1982 (Score:5, Interesting)
Then you expect to work for felons. Opening a piece of US Mail not addressed to you is a felony, whether the envelope is sitting in your private home mailbox or on your bosses desk. Even the worst libertarian excesses of the 1980s War on Drugs, as presided over by Edwin Meese never changed that particular aspect of the law. These excesses, which encouraged such nonsensical interpretations of property rights to include invading the privacy of anyone who happens to be on said property (taken to its logical conclusion, your employer should have the right to strip search you on "his" property), are in fact in opposition to 200+ years of statutory and common law in the United States.
You have a reasonable expectation of privacy on your person (and, thankfully, our only somewhat brainwashed culture continues to agree...so your boss cannot order you strip searched on suspicion of hiding company documents...yet).
You have a reasonable expectation of privacy in your snail mail correspondence, backed by federal law enforcing that privacy with downright draconian penalties should it be violated.
You have a reasonable expection of privacy when speaking on the phone
You should have a reasonable expectation of privacy in conducting correspondence via email, but again, the same flawed logic has been applied to extend property rights over the medium to include property rights over the content (your correspondence), merely because the medium is new (a computer network) and ignoring two centuries of precedent to the contrary in every other communications medium (including, until the 1980s, telephony).
It is unfortunate that you expect no privacy at work. You are certainly entitled to it
Re:The Radical Right Took Your Privacy Circa 1982 (Score:4, Funny)
You might want to pick up a dictionary and look at the word "libertarian".
Re:The Radical Right Took Your Privacy Circa 1982 (Score:3, Insightful)
New Jersey vs T.L.O. (1985) (Score:4, Insightful)
Only becuase we are not minors are we able to have any expectation to privacy. Very bizarre if you ask me.
Re:The Radical Right Took Your Privacy Circa 1982 (Score:3, Funny)
The "War on Drugs" certainly did cost us civil liberties - but honestly, this was an unfortunate side-effect of President Reagan allowing his wife to get her way on the issue, more th
Re:The Radical Right Took Your Privacy Circa 1982 (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:The Radical Right Took Your Privacy Circa 1982 (Score:3, Insightful)
Read up on some of his appointees. How about more lead for children and the healing power of Jesus [nytimes.com] to start you off? He's a self-proclaimed born-again, reads the bible every morning, thinks hes doing gods work in the middle east, etc.
Common sense - FOUND! (Score:2, Interesting)
You're asking people to act like adults.
As a manager/owner, I hire people for certain positions and I expect them to Do The Right Thing while they're working for me. In return, my employees want me to give them the tools to do their job and then (pretty much) get the hell out of the way, which I'm happy to do. None of us wants micromanagement.
I know that my employee
Re:I expect no privacy at work. (Score:3, Interesting)
While I'd certainly say that the boss could make such searches a requirement of employment (or drug tests, for that matter), doing so secretly and without warning is immoral. Dunno about the legality.
Re:I expect no privacy at work. (Score:2, Interesting)
WHATEVER means? Even unreasonable ones?
Check this out. It should be obvious that you're getting work done WITHOUT resorting to snooping. Any job should be set up in such a way that it is easily apparent whether or not you are making progress.
CASE 1: You are getting your work done.
Then they have no reason to snoop!
CASE 2: You are not getting your work done.
Then they
Re:I expect no privacy at work. (Score:2)
Re:I expect no privacy at work. (Score:2, Funny)
Well, let's see. I know on Slashdot we don't read articles, but do we at least read comments we are replying to?
With all that said... I did post this from work.
Ladies and gentlemen, we have our answer!
Ironic [HIPAA] (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Ironic [HIPAA] (Score:2, Insightful)
You know who's really invasive in the background checks? The NSA.
Re:Ironic [HIPAA] (Score:2)
Considering that some of their employees could have access to some real nasty shit (viruses and chemicals and whatnot),
I agree, they have reason to be concerned, and more companies should be. Many goverment agency employees and their contractors' employees were recently subjected to background checks.
it makes sense they'd be more closely scrutinized than a guy in a cubicle at IBM . . .
I don't agree with that. The coder in the IBM cubicle could very well have the keys (pardon the pun) to restricted
Lilly (Score:5, Funny)
While it's esay for us to sit here and complain on them for invasive background checks of workers after Sept. 11 its not that easy for them to avoid getting decent workers that don't disclose their research to terrorists. For example if Bin-Laden got hold of all the research of Elly he might avoid getting diseases like osteoporosis, cancer, depression, schizophrenia and attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder. So actually its better that they check their future employees than Bin-Laden getting 120 yeras old.
Good Old Bin Laden (Score:2)
Re:Good Old Bin Laden (Score:2)
Speaking of trust, I have this really nice Star Destoryer here, I can't show it to you, but if you pay me One Billion I will give it to you, interrested?
Re:Lilly (Score:2)
Re:Lilly (Score:3, Funny)
And we know there is a surging market for 41-year-old script geezers.
My Former Employer... (Score:5, Interesting)
And that was if you were on the boss's good side.
Glad to hear the bitch's company is on the verge of failing.
It's one of the few companies I know that has a yahoo group made of former employees where you can go to vent your spleen without worrying about getting sued by your former boss.
Goran
Re:My Former Employer... (Score:2)
Sounds like an entertaining read if you wouldn't mind posting the name.
Re:My Former Employer... (Score:3, Interesting)
Very lacking in detail (Score:2)
Re:Very lacking in detail (Score:4, Insightful)
It seems to me that corporations have a right to know a great deal about their employees' private lives after investing all that money in them.
Um, no. All a company has to worry about is whether or not the person can do the job in a manner that meets company standards, and whether they'll be able to continue doing it for the long-term. You see, I agree that a company has a certain stake in their employees being criminals, but only because that means the employee may not be around long. He might instead be in prison. Yeah, you want to hire honest people, not thieves, typically. But just because I've spent a ton of money on someone I just hired does not give me the right to pry/meddle into his life.
Nothing beats working at my joint (Score:3, Interesting)
I did a stint at a big Wall Street company that will remain nameless, but they were pretty free-form. They made me seem as if I were working for a small company, but thrumming underneath it all was this behomoth.
BUT -- despite the freedom in our dept, there were these poor slobs in the shirtsleeves who we knew could never ever tread off the path or righteousness, or the would be eternally damned.
Pragmatism (Score:5, Interesting)
Or do they work harder, and quit earlier? What's the cost of replacement?
It'd sure be nice if a well-funded and run study showed that being nice made people more productive... any studies at all?
Anybody remember the campus of a software company that had free medical (via on-site doctor) child care, membership in a health club, free food (all you can eat) soccer games, and the like?
I seem to remember seeing "60 Minutes" or something on this company - how they were able to improve productivity *and* morale by providing the extras on campus so that the people are just free to work...
Anybody have a link? Can this method be brought to everyday, or is/was this a fluke based on uncommonly good market conditions for said company?
Hawthorne (not Nate) (Score:2)
Around the 50s and 60s, there were some questions asked as to what low cost steps could be taken to improve worker output in an office environment. They tried a lot of things, plants were added to one office, light music was played in another, windows were opened for fresh air all sorts of little things, and then some of the offices were controls in which nothing was changed. What they found was, everything, including the control group had a large jump in pr
Heh. (Score:5, Funny)
I don't work there anymore.
Re:Heh. (Score:4, Interesting)
1) Yes, the keylogger really was that bad. My machine running "ACertainOS 98SE(TM)" was rather stable (and fast) up until it was installed.
I agree, they are normally very simple programs. This one however was (is) quite bloated. It was trying to take snapshots of the desktop every few seconds and saving them as a JPEG (in C:\ also). It was called WinGuardian. Check it out sometime. [webroot.com]
2) When I discovered what caused the crashing (googled for the file that crashed, 'sysctrl.exe', found out it was a keylogger), I went looking. Wasn't hard to find.
3) Oh c'mon, I'm allowed a few typos.
Now take a deep breath, drink a nice glass of warm milk and get some sleep mate!
angry (Score:2, Funny)
Not surprising a pharmaceutical company ranked low (Score:5, Interesting)
I'm in Canada and a friend got a job in the States for a big pharma a few years back. They did the whole background check and called up all his references etc... I assumed it was because he was Canadian trying to work in the US, but all this was before 9/11. I imagine it's gotten even more stringent since.
One reason for the security is that big pharma have HUGE animal facilities for thier pre-clinical experiments. Not trying to start a flame war here, but it's part of the process that you test potential drugs on animals before you submit an application for a new drug for human trials (IND) to the FDA.
It's quite normal to use thousands of rodents to develop a potential new drug. Not only efficacy, but parameters like maximum tolerated dosage, bioavailability of various formulations, biological half-life, clearance routes, metabolism, etc etc, all have to be characterized in animals before you even think about testing in humans. While appalling to some, it's part of the industry and just a small part of what it takes to get a drug onto the market.
For some companies, the animal facilities are housed in their own massive buildings and secured like a military installation. They probably use hundreds of thousands (if not millions) of animals per year and would make prime targets for animal activists. Probably not a very enticing a target for terrorists, but background checks in this industry are nothing new.
I work for a small company, and we dont do background checks, but during interviews we try and get a sense of a candidates interests and hobbies. Things like volunteering for PETA immediately raises serious red flags.
I agree. (Score:4, Interesting)
I also worked at a Bank before 9/11. There was massive surveillance of its employees. Ebay? You're fired. Talk about looking for another job? You're fired. Using Hotmail or Yahoo for personal email? You're fired. That bank lost a major lawsuit for videotaping the bathrooms in that West Palm Beach headquarters. They still videotape it: the "winners" of the lawsuit also got fired. They had a security department devoted to listening to phone calls, watching your email and snooping your web tracks. Being hired to develop software with Visual Studio, my first task was to hack the locked down NT boxes (wow, padlocks on the floppy drives! C2 is a joke) because Visual Studio was not on the approved software list. And of course, after a few months, the software audit showed unapproved software on the computer, so I was fired. LMAO.
Background checks for employees probably got a big boost after the tylenol tampering case. I am sure that some disgruntled employees have flicked boogers into the medicine before it gets bottled or tabletized. I am sure you have seen the "real tv" shows with the surveillance footage of some guy urinating into a coffee pot at the office. Could your company afford to make 100,000,000,000 pills with urine in them?
Mine's great (Score:3, Funny)
Privacy is so good.... (Score:4, Funny)
Pretty hard to walk buy and catch someone watchin porn when they're halfway around the world!
Re:God-punish (Score:2)
What the fuck is up with Slashdot these days?
Worker Privacy (Score:2, Interesting)
I used to work for a fortune 500 company that had a similar policy.
hardcorescooters.com [hardcorescooters.com]
Love Life.
Re:Worker Privacy (Score:2)
For that matter, what happens when you catch an employee at something using the logs of emails or IMs? Once s/he tells colleagues, isn't your grand plan of clandestine monitoring sort of exposed?
Re:Worker Privacy (Score:2)
Thus I use trillian and SecureIM. Keeps those guys in IS/IT out of my business.
George Bush, Sr. & Lilly (Score:5, Informative)
what about.... (Score:2)
they certainly employ a large number of people.
Atmosphere (Score:3, Interesting)
Let's say I hypothetically work for some state goverment in horse country...err... in their IT dept.
I fully expect to have everything I do monitored and checked and this is fine and good. However there are those that tend to feel that such parental micromanagement is more a hindrance than a nessesity. How do you measure the LOSS of productivity? How many times does one NEED to go over an email to make sure that it isn't offensive to some obscure sect of midget neo-nazi lesbians that might accidentally get it?
It takes an awful lot of time to cross the building when you have to walk on egg shells to do it. I'm not trying to say that businesses should not monitor employees but I am trying to say that there is a loss of productivity in trying to make sure that you are walking a very tight, narrow line.
I know most monitoring is for porn, company secrets, company porn or whatever but the truth is that monitoring has gone into overdrive and we are losing our ability to communicate because everything has to be bleached of meaning to avoid offending even the most sensitive soul.
I'm not sure that we can have real communication when we are so worried about accidentally communicating something unpopular.
website photos (Score:2)
knee-jerk privacy (Score:3, Interesting)
Umm
And what the hell does "invasive" entail?
Specifics, please!
you want specifics? you got 'em (Score:3, Interesting)
they required a huge background check, a stringent drug test (no detox is gonna get you outta this one) and several interviews and when they found out he had been arrested for disorderly conduct (drunk at a party) they wanted to see a copy of the police report too... the fa
Don't seem to bad (Score:3, Interesting)
Then again I'm working through the University, so they probably could get access to my school records, and I'm only making $9 an 'hour'
Good (Score:3, Insightful)
Comment removed (Score:5, Interesting)
I used to work at IBM (Score:2, Interesting)
Anecdotally speaking, Lily == the mob (Score:3, Interesting)
Now, wait a minute, you're thinking. It's not inconceivable that in doing so it could help to seal your next step up (hopefully) within the company, but it's been made pretty clear that (at least in his division) your life is the Company's, and vice-versa. A career, if you will.
It was just a little too scary to hear.
Not surprising to me (Score:5, Insightful)
There are a lot of managers out there. A relatively few number of them actually have any special training, most within IBM have special training. An MBA alone doesn't turn you in to a good manager or executive. IBM knows that and they have a process of creating good managers and execs, just like the military has a process of creating officers. People from the engineering career path decide to become managers, they go through training than then they are managers. At other companies it's an over night process, one day a guy is a senior software engineer and the next he's a manager. Subsequently, the MBAs I've had to deal with who weren't manager tended to be assholes who thought of themselves in a completely different light that the worker bees (just by virtue they should be paid more, drive a BMW and give orders, not all of them but an alarming number of them were that way) and those engineers come managers that I've worked with desparately wanted a number to quantify employee performance without actually knowing how the employees were doing. They either micro managed and their employees could only ever fail because they "could never do it as good as the boss" or they were left totally hands off and the boss had no idea who did what, when or why. At IBM my bosses trusted my judgement, they worked within that, they protected me, they asked my advice on technical matters, they dealt with politics, they were enablers and at the end of each year they had a pretty good idea why I worked for them, what I brought to the table, how i needed to improve and how I was of value; they knew the skill-set that I had and at times they moved me to better match that or to grow those skills in directions I desired. Also at IBM if you screw up, it goes to your manager, you surf porn and it's your manager that hears about it and sees the report, except for a few major offenses it's usually put in to your boss' hands when you do something wrong. Who better knows what the circumstances may be? Who better to judge your value to the company when you screw up?
I think the classic example was a coworker who got caught drinking in his car at lunch time. He was just sitting out there drinking from the bottle, it was a flat violation of policy (I think booze is semi okay at IBM now, they have beer at some functions) well as it turns out his wife had left him the night before. He could have been fired, HR at a midsized company may have just fired him. His manager had a talk with him, gave him a repremand, explained that it can't happen again and didn't fire him. Offered to get him enrolled in some alchohol classes or rehab and at that point this person essentially started to rebuild his life that had just been falling apart.
Now there are always problems, but IBM is a company that is built on trust and when the right people are in the right places and the trust is there they are a very very powerful company and a very difficult company to compete with. They've been around nearly 100 years and I expect them to be around another if they keep to these practices. They are a company to emulate in many ways and the ways they manage and trust their employees is one of them.
Comment removed (Score:3, Interesting)
IBM (Score:3, Informative)
IBM? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:IBM? (Score:3, Funny)
Where's mine dammit?
Re:IBM? (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:IBM? - Power corrupts (Score:3, Insightful)
Now they don't, so they adapt to a changed business environment. IBM does not support Linux because it gives their top bosses a warm fuzzy feeling inside. They support Linux because they see big money in it, long-term.
Note: I'm a free-market economist, so I see this as a Good Thing.
Re:IBM? (Score:5, Funny)
They didn't. Everyone else got bad-bad.
Re:IBM? (Score:4, Informative)
Remember when IBM was The Man? Not as in "You The Man", but as in "You've sold out to The Man, man!" The Evil Empire? Big, corporate, bad guys? Now, they love Linux, they don't snoop on employees, they fight SCO-style crap, and so on? When did they get all nice-nice?
It was either that or die, as I recall. They didn't have the greatest of times in the dot-boom.
Re:IBM? (Score:2)
It was either that or die, as I recall. They didn't have the greatest of times in the dot-boom.
Actually, IBM was booming along with the rest, although at a slower pace (as you'd expect from a blue chip). You're right about the "either that or die", but that was a few years before the boom; IBM had recovered and was growing nicely by the time the boom hit.
Re:IBM? (Score:3, Informative)
Different parts of IBM, maybe? I joined IBM in 97, so I was there through most of the boom. In IBM Global Services we had tons of work and couldn't get enough people (at one time there was a $5000 reward for employees who got their buddies to come to work for IBM). Meanwhile the stock price was going up, up, up (from ~$30 in 97 to ~$130 in mid 2000). It even split once. I think that was in 98.
The pension plan change did happen during the boom, but that change wasn't made so much to cut benefits and s
Re:IBM? (Score:3, Funny)
Re:IBM Privacy.... (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Here's the text for non-members (Score:3, Funny)
I've been afraid of this. The proliferation of penis enlargement spam, and thus penis enlargement "natural herbal methods" has given companies an excuse not to pay up on health insurance claims. If you measure 3" longer than you should (to say nothing of breadth and vigor), you've obviously been popping the pills, and since the side effects are unknown, your claim is nullified. It's the new urine test, only you don't even need a