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More Warnings Against Oversharing on MySpace

Skapare writes "Your next prospective employer might be watching your MySpace page, according to a story at the New York Times. And if you think Facebook is more private, maybe not if that prospective employer has an intern from the same school checking up on you." From the article: "Students may not know when they have been passed up for an interview or a job offer because of something a recruiter saw on the Internet. But more than a dozen college career counselors said recruiters had been telling them since last fall about incidents in which students' online writing or photographs had raised serious questions about their judgment, eliminating them as job candidates."

6 of 383 comments (clear)

  1. Woohoo! by hpcanswers · · Score: 5, Funny

    This is great news; my Facebook site is a combination resume, cover letter, and reference letters. Hey recruiters, this way!

  2. Modern Net Exhibitionism and Slutism ... by orangeguru · · Score: 4, Funny

    On the Internet - everybody knows that you are a perv' ...

  3. Not only MySpace by cheese-cube · · Score: 5, Funny

    Imagine if a prospective employer saw your Slashdot postings!

    Employer: I'm sorry but your just not the person we're looking for.
    You: But why?
    Employer: We saw that all your Slashdot posts were rated -1 Troll and our company doesn't need anymore trolls.
    You: Damn it!

  4. Re:Good thing this doesn't happen to doctors by lavaface · · Score: 4, Funny
    But she is now known on the workfloor not for her brains or years of good work but her perky tits.

    link to pics,plz ; )

  5. Re:So? by colinrichardday · · Score: 3, Funny

    You can pretend to be somebody you're not, but by and large kids in particular are really savvy to this kind of "fronting".

    So teenagers never get fooled by 40 year-old guys pretending to be seventeen?

  6. Re:It's as much the employer's loss here by Surt · · Score: 4, Funny

    Personally, I set up a couple of fake myspace accounts for 'former employers' where they have a reference to what great work i've done, or how I solved a problem that really saved the companies ass ('sometimes I wonder if this company could have survived the last 2 years without the help of surt's real name here'. I bury it in with a ton of other material about the daughter's birthday or this or that so it won't look too blatant or fake hopefully. I believe it would be enough to fool most people's first search efforts, and should even pass an uncareful examination.

    Anyone who goes googling for me on the internet is going to find that apparently there are a number of people who think really highly of me as a coworker.

    --
    "Who is the Journal of Quantum Physics going to believe?" --Stephen Hawking