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jason
03-26-2008, 08:58 AM
Employers should be banned from searching Facebook profiles of job applicants, say children's groups

Last updated at 11:32am on 25th March 2008

Leading charities are calling for companies to be banned from trawling Facebook and other social networking websites for information on job applicants.

A coalition including the NSPCC, the Children's Society and the NCH want a new law to prevent employers and colleges searching the internet for "digital dirt" on potential recruits.

Studies show one in five employers use the internet to check out candidates and two thirds of those admit their final decision has been influenced by what they found.

Checking networking sites is also common practice for recruitment agencies with research showing more than 60 per cent of British executives are signed up to Facebook or similar.

The children's charities argue that this is akin to nosing through someone's diary and is examining whether existing discrimination laws could be used to prevent the practice.

The children's charities want companies to be banned from searching Facebook and other social networking websites for information on potential employees

John Carr, secretary of the Children's Charities' Coalition on Internet Safety which is co-ordinating the campaign, said pictures and gossip posted while someone is a teenager should not be used against them years later.

He told the The Times: "When young people put up their personal profiles they are not thinking about job or university applications.

"Typically, they are simply talking to their mates. Employers or admissions tutors who delve into these places are being highly and inappropriately intrusive.

"It's a bit like looking at someone's diary."

He added: A world where even a 14-year-old has to think twice before posting an adolescent poem suddenly looks very unappealing and increases the pressure on children and young people to conform to a set of tightly focused adult norms."

The law currently enforces equal opportunities in recruitment and a system that searches social network sites could be unfair because some candidates will have profiles and others will not.

But if this does not go far enough, data protection laws could be used. An employer might then have to gain permission to read online data, in the same way as asking for a referee.


Work and Pensions Secretary James Purnell has been asked what he thinks about employers using the sites
Margaret Moran, Labour MP for Luton South, is talking to authorities in the House of Commons about a ten-minute rule Bill to tighten up the law.

She has also written to Work and Pensions Secretary James Purnell, asking him if he believes employers should use social networking sites for recruitment.

"Social networking sites were never intended as a factual reference point for young people," the MP said.

"The technology allows unverified content to go up very easily. It is simple to load up spoof profiles and meddle with images. Companies have no way to verify what is up there."

The British scientist who created the world wide web, Sir Tim Berners-Lee, recently insisted that online data and web history must belong to the individual who posted it.

But he also warned that people must consider what they are up-loading because once it is on the internet, it is regarded as common property.

David Smith, the Deputy Information Commissioner, also highlighted that there are privacy settings that can be set up but more than half of young people choose to make their profiles public.

He said: "The cost to a person's future can be very high if something undesirable is found by the increasing number of education institutions and employers using the internet as a tool to vet potential students or employees."

The Chartered Institute of Personnel Development (CIPD), which has been approached by the charities for support, is not in favour of an outright ban but warns companies to be careful about using the websites.

Resourcing adviser Deborah Fernon said: "I wouldn't want it to become illegal because in some industries, advertising and IT for example, personal sites have become almost a CV in itself, and that might become more commonplace.

"But we would warn companies that in the quest to find the right person for a job, social networking sites could be at best irrelevant and at worst misleading.

"Also, good practice requires that every candidate is treated equally, which means all candidates would have to have similar profiles before information is used, otherwise it would be discriminatory."


LINK (http://www.dailymail.co.uk/pages/live/articles/news/news.html?in_article_id=544389&in_page_id=1770)





i think if you want to post things on the internet, you should not be allowed to have an expectation of privacy....

BobcatBenny
03-26-2008, 10:40 AM
Originally posted by jason
. . . i think if you want to post things on the internet, you should not be allowed to have an expectation of privacy....
You are correct, but the first thing that everyone who uses the internet must remember. Just because it is on the internet, does not mean that it is factual. Even if I post something about myself it may not be factual.

Suppose I were to post something here that is in disagreement, lets say, with the majority of the other posters. Imagine that! :D

Because the majority of other posters disagree, it does not make me wrong. It just means I have taken an opposing view. There are many reasons why I might take up the opposing view point. And . . . I do not even have to believe that viewpoint is the truth to assume that platform. For many, taking the opposing argument or position is a test of the other. It can be an exercise to test the validity of the other position.

It is also too easy to take information out of context or its intended purpose.

For example, let's say that on this board I did not like your post and I said, "Jason you are gay!"

What if a potential employer takes that out of context? And the hiring person is biased, which we generally all are, and says to themselves, you know what a gay guy might create friction in that position. So, they just move your resume to the bottom of the stack.

You did not write that. And it was not the truth. Is it? :eek: :D

Truth be told, it is nearly impossible to police the information on the internet and many times the moderators are pathetic. :p

Bottom line is this.

If you are a company or employee of a company that is using uncertified or tested information from the internet, to make hiring decisions then you are participating in discriminatory practices and you are exposing your company to risk.

BuffyMars
03-26-2008, 11:13 AM
i could care less if people scan my profile. if you put it up there then everybody and their mama should have access.

if you don't want people knowing your business, then don't put it on public display and then cry foul because you posted on your page that you are a recovering addict who served 10 years on probation for grand theft auto after you took advantage of the neighbor's dog.

i probably wouldn't hire you either, weirdo!

Txbroadcaster
03-26-2008, 11:14 AM
Originally posted by BuffyMars

if you don't want people knowing your business, then don't put it on public display and then cry foul because you posted on your page that you are a recovering addict who served 10 years on probation for grand theft auto after you took advantage of the neighbor's dog.



why are u telling about ur past?

STANG RED
03-26-2008, 11:14 AM
Originally posted by BuffyMars
i could care less if people scan my profile. if you put it up there then everybody and their mama should have access.

if you don't want people knowing your business, then don't put it on public display and then cry foul because you posted on your page that you are a recovering addict who served 10 years on probation for grand theft auto after you took advantage of the neighbor's dog.

i probably wouldn't hire you either, weirdo!

:clap: :clap: :clap: BRAVO!!!

3afan
03-26-2008, 11:16 AM
if people are dumb enough to put their info out there, then too bad

nobogey72
03-26-2008, 11:21 AM
Originally posted by BuffyMars
i could care less if people scan my profile. if you put it up there then everybody and their mama should have access.

if you don't want people knowing your business, then don't put it on public display and then cry foul because you posted on your page that you are a recovering addict who served 10 years on probation for grand theft auto after you took advantage of the neighbor's dog.

i probably wouldn't hire you either, weirdo!

OK!! WHO TOLD YOU ????? None of that was on the internet. Somebody's got a big mouth.:mad: And for what it's worth, not all of your info is correct. I did not "take advantage" of that dog. He wanted it just as much as me. What's the word? Consexual? Yeah, that's it, it was consexual sex. :D :D

BobcatBenny
03-26-2008, 11:27 AM
Originally posted by 3afan
if people are dumb enough to put their info out there, then too bad
Sometimes your information is on the internet with or without your permisson.

http://dontdatehimgirl.com

crzyjournalist03
03-26-2008, 12:23 PM
Originally posted by BobcatBenny
Sometimes your information is on the internet with or without your permisson.

http://dontdatehimgirl.com

wow...I've never seen that before...that's hilarious!!!