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Beware Your Online Presence

Mz6 wrote to mention an article in the NY Daily News stating that an increasing number of employers are Googling their prospective employees during the interview/hiring process. From the article: "'A friend of mine posted a picture of me on My Space with my eyes half closed and a caption that suggests I've smoked something illegal,' says Kluttz. While the caption was a joke, Kluttz now wonders whether the past two employers she interviewed with thought it was so funny. Both expressed interest in hiring Kluttz, but at the 11th hour went with someone else."

8 of 677 comments (clear)

  1. Re:Simple to avoid. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Sorry, but I think this is a big deal. If I had known in 1990 that all my postings to Usenet would be publicly available many years after the fact, I might have thought twice before posting some of the articles I did, but now there are some postings from me around, that I am ashamed of 16 years later.

    I am pretty sure, I am not the only one this has happened to.

  2. Re:Use an alias. Do not post your last name on... by ZachPruckowski · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Honestly, I can't see a girl having a great time, then googling you and finding out you're a geek, then going, "Well darn, I found an nice, kind, witty, entertaining and all-around great guy. Too bad he's good with computers". Would you really want to date someone like that?

  3. What is "good stuff"? by GuyMannDude · · Score: 5, Insightful

    It's quite simple to prevent this from happening to you. Post "good stuff" under your real name, perhaps linked to a professional-sounding alias, and post other crap under another alias that you never link to your real name.

    As others have already pointed out, it's difficult to make sure that every person in the world who has a photo of you won't post something that isn't very flattering. But even ignoring that for the moment, what consistutes "good stuff" in your mind is likely to change. Suppose you are a first-year student in grad school and you post something under your real name stating that your dream is to become a professor. Very noble, very "good stuff". Fast-forward several grueling years when you are burned out. Your goals have changed and academia doesn't sound so great. You start interviewing for companies and tell them during the interview that you have a strong interest in tackling today's technical problems.

    After you leave, the people you interviewed with start googling around to see what they can dig up on you and come across this thing you wrote many years earlier. Now there's doubt in their mind. Are you looking at an industrial position because you didn't get a postdoc? Are you just looking to make some big bucks in the private sector for five years before returning to what you love -- academia? Maybe I trust you and realize that your priorities have changed. How do I know they won't change back? You wrote so eloquently about the fact that your life-long dream was to become a professor a few years ago. How much do I want to bet that you won't dream this way again?

    And what about posting your politicial, philosophical, or personal beliefs on the web? You write a well-thought-out essay about a woman's right to choose and your pro-life potential-employer finds it. You may think that's "good stuff" but your employer sure doesn't. You're making this way too simple. The article brings up a very good point. You are unwise to dismiss it as "someone else's problem" so easily, my friend.

    GMD

  4. GOOGLE YOURSELF by a_greer2005 · · Score: 5, Insightful
    One of my teachers in college had some really good advice, (within the last year) he said "if you wouldnt buy a house without reviewing your vredit report, you shouldnt look for work without looking for dirt on yourself"

    He said "go to myspace, google. yahoo, MSN, hotjobs, anything that a potential employer may use, and make sure that anything that shows up is accurate"

    If someone online is posting false info on you, then call the service and demand its removal, hire a lawyer if necessary.

  5. Interesting past, future problems... by ShadowBlasko · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I have spent quite a bit of time on this issue as I have some experience in this area.

    Without going into details, (but I know the slashdot crowd can find it, just with a whois on my domains) I was once accused of being a VAMPIRE in a court of law.

    Cute, stupid, and it didn't really work for the defendant in the case.

    The media had a blast with it. I was on CNN's legal section... I made "News of the odd" The Fax News, several papers, and Fark.

    The problems began when a local reporter found my personal website, and went hunting. She found a list of "Pagan buttons and bumpersticker" joke that I thought were humorous and posted them out of context in the article.

    Imagine my (very religious) grandmother looking at the paper and finding out that

    1) I was pagan (admittedly, my grandfather who was a preacher knew, but asked that I never tell her)
    2) I was a Vampire (at least according to some people)
    and 3) That I was apparently a fan of throwing Christians to lions! (not true)

    Problem is, it never goes away. Someone will ask about it from time to time, it comes up in interviews, and just in places I never expect it.

    It is somewhat amusing for me... but can you imagine what would happen if someone were to link your name to something really nasty?

    I wrote an article on the need for a "media blackout" type of period in regards to recent child porn arrests, where alledged child porn was found on someones machine by a 3rd party.

    Inevitably the media learns of the situation (happened with a Best Buy tech who was snooping someones machine in Tennessee)and reports a name and the fact of the arrest.

    Whether the individual is guilty or innocent no longer matters at that point. His (or her) name is indelibly linked to "(insert name) arrested on child porn allegations".

    Your life would be OVER.

    Now I think people who deal with that stuff are sick and need help and I am not defending them in any way! But I do think we are not far from a period where people are going to start suing to have their name scrubbed from certain places on the net. Good luck to them, because getting something off the net is like getting pee out of a pool.

    Or was it "Un-ringing a bell"?

    --
    There are 4 boxes to use in the defense of liberty: soap, ballot, jury, ammo. Use in that order- Ed Howdershelt Via Tass
  6. Re:Maybe he *was* smoking something by ensignyu · · Score: 5, Insightful

    At least with government records, there's a certain amount of reliability associated with them. Also, if you have a date-of-birth or city or anything to narrow things down, you're less likely to confuse two people with the same name.

    On the other hand, suppose you've been good about keeping your name off the web, but there's another person with the same name who has a bad reputation. How's the employer going to know that it's not really you, if there's not enough details to disprove it?

    So background checks are one thing; using Google is completely different in terms of reliability.

  7. Tattoos and MySpace: Regrets in the making by calstraycat · · Score: 5, Insightful

    In about ten years, there will be millions of regretful twenty- and thirty-somthings, particularly women. The regret will be tied to two things: pictures on MySpace and tattoos. Both are permanent. Both seem cool/sexy at eighteen and both are neither at thirty.

    I'm thankful that the trends of my youth involved only bad haircuts and cheesy clothing.

  8. Re:My girlfriend played Wow.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Wow, you're one insecure motherfucker!