Slashdot Mirror


Fired for Solitare At Work

schlick writes "The Associated Press is carrying a story about a NYC employee fired after Mayor Michael Bloomberg noticed a game of solitare on the employee's desktop at work." From the article: "Greenwood, who earned $27,000 a year and had worked in the office for six years, said in a telephone interview that he limited his play time to his one-hour lunch or during quick breaks when he needed a moment of distraction. 'It wasn't like I spent hours and hours a day playing, because I had plenty to do,' Greenwood said. 'If I had been working at something exhaustively for two hours, I might get a cup of coffee and play for a minute but then go right back to my work.'"

9 of 680 comments (clear)

  1. Terms of use by Unknown_monkey · · Score: 5, Interesting

    What was his computer policy at work? If I do it, I'm fired if they want to enforce it.

    1. Re:Terms of use by Billly+Gates · · Score: 4, Interesting

      I work in a different industry but its like this where I work.

      I do I.T. work at an amusement park but I also drive trams when its busy because its what I did before I got promoted. Anyway the CEO here has fire d people for sitting down at work and for even using a cell phone in a private break area away from guests. No cells allowed nor is looking like your not working in front of guests allowed. Cells outside of the public are allowed but its different when he is around. Even though I work in IT, I was asked by him why I was not picking cigarette butts where I was volunteering to work (clearing trams). I would have been termed onsite and to me its silly but that is just business as usual.

  2. Rules by BrookHarty · · Score: 4, Interesting

    If he was playing on a break or on his lunch time, i dont see an issue. If his job wasnt getting done fire him..

    That was a scumbag move of the mayor, firing him without even talking to him.

  3. Re:Not something to worry about by rob_squared · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Most employers also try to fire someone because they aren't liked, or if they are perceved as a liability to the company. And let me explain what that means.

    There is a person at a company I work for, that gets the mandatory levels of productivity needed to keep the job. They are also very outspoken about company issues, which disagree with the current practices (union and so on). So every time he gets audited (monthly process) they purposefully find his worst interactions in the hopes that he'll be below standard and they can fire him. Some people didn't believe this so he purposefully made a small mistake in one interaction and wrote down the ID of that interaction. The next month, that was the one audited. This has been shown more than once, and they're just waiting for an "approved" reason to terminate employment.

    This kind of discrimination does exist, they just hide it behind protocol and procedure.

    --
    I don't get it.
  4. like a teenager and a car... by SuperBanana · · Score: 5, Interesting
    Really now, don't you know that what you do at work WITH COMPANY RESOURCES is up to the (shock) COMPANY?

    Yep. It's like my parents and I when I was in high school:

    Mom: "Okay, what car are you taking?"

    Me: "My car."

    Dad: *COUGHAHEM*

    Me: "The car which I am permitted to use."

    Dad: "Have fun!"

    I see it all the time- employees get very posessive about their computers. The word "my" is thrown around very casually, they get attached to them, etc. Hell, I worked at places where people (almost exclusively sales staff) would take laptops with them when let go, and they'd act REALLY pissed when we called them and asked for them back. Some we had to literally harass the CRAP out of, to get machines returned- and when they were, they'd invariably be damaged, usually the keyboard and mouse/trackpad buttons; it was clear they whacked the shit out of it with a shoe or something just to piss us off.*

    It's equipment. Capital. I don't see a machine shop operator getting pissed when he's fired and he can't take the mill home with him...


    *I've also had to lock sales people out of databases WHILE they were getting "The Talk", because in the past, every single one of their predecessors had immediately logged in to the customer database from home and dumped it... un frigging believeable. Never had more trouble with terminated/let go employees than with sales dweebs/bimbos. ZERO morals, which I'd like to think was part of the reason they were fired.

  5. A similar story... by fm6 · · Score: 4, Interesting
    One day Henry Ford was walking through his factory, when he saw a worker slouched on a crate, trimming a wire in what Ford considered to be a clumsy manner. Ford kicked the crate out from under the worker and yelled, "Get out of my factory! You're fired."

    "But Mr. Ford! You can't fire me!"

    "Why the hell not?"

    "I don't work for you! I work for the phone company!"

    1. Re:A similar story... by curious.corn · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Dude you're wrong. It's not the workers that wrecked your auto industry, it's the management. The USA automotive industry develops mostly for the domestic market and there's no way in hell an american car will ever sell on the worldwide marketplace. Your cars are too focused on your national taste and distant from the EU, developing countries or Asia. US cars are generally speaking gargantuan, auto-drive, semi-trucks; such platforms are impossible to reengineer for foreign markets from which you have more or less cut yourself out. Add up some ferocious competition in a mature, saturated industry and some quality control issues and there is your recipe for disaster. Mind you, I'm italian and we have the exact same problem here with FIAT, rescaled appropriately.

      --
      Mi domando chi à il mandante di tutte le cazzate che faccio - Altan
  6. Re:Back in the day of Windows 3.1... by sparkz · · Score: 4, Interesting

    When I did PC support, there was a new-hire secretary who had no Windows experience. (This was in the days of Win3.1). I showed her how to find the games, as these would help her to use the mouse. Without that, she'd no idea about what the mouse did, or what it was for.

    --
    Author, Shell Scripting : Expert Re
  7. Re:If they enforced this by Voltageaav · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Yeah, here where I work, Slashdot is one of the VERY few nongovernment sites not blocked. Even some sites relavant to my work are banned. Even my personal webpage is blocked after two visits to it for links.

    --
    Someone save me from this sanity.