Should You Break TOS Because Work Asks You?
An anonymous reader writes "My boss recently assigned me a project that was all his idea, with two basic flaws that would require me to break multiple web sites' Terms of Service (TOS). Part requires scraping most of the site, parsing the data and presenting it as our own without human intervention. While we're safe on copyright issues, clearly scraping like this is normally not allowed. At times it might also put a load on those sites. The other is, for lack of better words, a 'load balancing' part that requires using multiple free accounts instead of purchasing space and CPU time for less than $2,000 USD per month. The boss sees it as 'distributed' computing when in reality it's 'parasitic.'
My question is: am I wrong about the ethics? If I do need to walk, how best can I handle it without damaging my reputation and future employment opportunities?"
Did the contractors on the Death Star deserve to die?
Babies really shouldn't be given candy in the first place.
I told you to scrape Slashdot, not read it. Now get back to work!
Kwisatz Haderach
Sell the spice to CHOAM
This Mahdi took Shaddam's Throne
No, no, no. If you want legal advice, ask Slashdot! Given enough time, you'll get an answer that is exactly what you hoped for and you can ignore or mod down the ones you don't like. It couldn't be simpler and it's a whole lot cheaper!
Reminds me of a time when an Ebay'er was pointing to images on my website for an automotive auction. Didn't ask us or give us credit for the images. So, his example of "recently restored examples" became a photo of a '63 Imperial being loaded into a crusher.
How's that for Crushing the Competition?!
To Copy from One is Plagiarism; To Copy from Many is Research.
The typical PHB will read the first two lines on his blackberry, and you're golden. Worst case he or she will scroll down - but the managerial brain is set to shut down at the word "perl". The word "cron" is a failsafe - in case the PHB also has ADD.
Later when s/he comes back and says "why didn't you warn me", you can point to the text "beneath the fold" of your email.
Somebody once pointed at a picture of a frosted birthday cake on my web site from a forum. So I grabbed my image editor and built a special edition of the cake just for him, where the frosting read "Don't link to my images!"
I also have a specially crafted JPEG which is under 1000 bytes but which produces a 20,000x20,000 pixel image filled with black. It will totally screw up the layout of any page linking to it if they haven't entered an explicit size for the tag.
If you mod me Overrated, you are admitting that you have no penis.