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Maryland Bans Employers From Asking For Facebook Passwords

Freddybear writes with news that yesterday Maryland passed a bill through both houses of the state legislature that would forbid employers from requiring job applicants or employees to provide access to social media accounts. The bill now awaits only the signature of governor Martin O'Malley. "The bill is the first of its kind in the country, and has shined a spotlight on the practice of employers demanding personal social media passwords from potential hires, [said Melissa Goemann of the ACLU]." Similar legislation is being developed in California, Illinois and Michigan, according to the Washington Post.

8 of 211 comments (clear)

  1. Not a problem by Billly+Gates · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Just accept that friendly request from that HR lady as a condition of employment.

    Just last night I saw an ad on craigslist where the employer wanted me to click on a emloyment site that used Facebook as a login and requirement. I figured it was a scam. But it did offer a new password that you could choose different from Facebook but you had to friend the site first ... and the employer can check to see if you have a pic drinking or do a grammar and spelling check on your casual entries etc.

    1. Re:Not a problem by Osgeld · · Score: 5, Insightful

      "and the employer can check to see if you have a pic drinking"

      and they can look at it all they want, they are not my mother and I am well beyond legal age to drink, they dont like it then they can kiss every square inch of my ass cause I would not fit in to their "sand vagina" culture anyway.

    2. Re:Not a problem by LordLucless · · Score: 5, Informative

      No, just create a "People That Suck" group, set your default privacy policy to exclude that group, and add your employer to that group. To your employer, it'll just look like you never use Facebook.

      --
      Just because you're paranoid doesn't mean there isn't an invisible demon about to eat your face
  2. Re:I hope it isn't too specific. by TheBlueCrab · · Score: 5, Informative

    It seems like its broad enough. Here's the actual bill itself.

  3. Re:Do employers really ask for your fb password? by DarwinSurvivor · · Score: 5, Insightful

    In British Columbia, Canada there is actually a list of things an employer is NOT allowed to ask you (age, marital status, religion, sexual orientation, etc), and almost all of them can be answered by viewing your facebook account.

  4. Re:Do employers really ask for your fb password? by MaskedSlacker · · Score: 5, Informative

    Los Angeles County Sheriff's Department requires it for one that I know of personally.

  5. Think further. by khasim · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Focus your Facebook account on your off-hours hobby of DJ'ing for gay Jewish inter-racial couples retreats.

    Then let them explain themselves if they don't hire you. They'd have to demonstrate how your off-hours activity did NOT influence their hiring process.

    After they kind of implied that your off-hours hobbies WOULD influence their hiring decision.

    It's a lose-lose for them. I don't see why any company with any intelligent HR person would even broach the subject of "social media" with applicants.

    1. Re:Think further. by tlhIngan · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Focus your Facebook account on your off-hours hobby of DJ'ing for gay Jewish inter-racial couples retreats.

      Then let them explain themselves if they don't hire you. They'd have to demonstrate how your off-hours activity did NOT influence their hiring process.

      After they kind of implied that your off-hours hobbies WOULD influence their hiring decision.

      It's a lose-lose for them. I don't see why any company with any intelligent HR person would even broach the subject of "social media" with applicants.

      There are third party services that'll google you and search for public social network information. These services are the ones who see your actual information and they black out anything that is illegal to be used - i.e., if you have a normal photo of yourself, your face and hands (but not, say your T-shirt) will be blacked out to prevent revealing race, age, and gender. Any other information that reveals it will also be blacked out.

      Here's an example one someone ran.

      So the company can claim ignorance by presenting this stuff.

      Of course, things that invalid this check would be asking for you password directly (since they could access it). Which s why these companies don't do that - they just seek out blogs, profiles and other stuff publicly accessible.