PDA

View Full Version : 5 ways your computer used can get you fired


Scandalicious
05-04-2008, 07:11 PM
5 Ways Your Computer Use Can Get You Fired
Liz Wolgemuth, U.S. News & World Report, Yahoo! HotJobs


It's essential for some jobs, handy for most, but don't be fooled -- the personal computer can be a job ender. Even as you read this story, you should probably be asking yourself: Am I actually allowed to browse online and read news stories at the office?

The parameters for computer use at work (and even at home) are often confusing. We communicate, network, watch our TV shows, do our grocery shopping, and get our news on our computers. But it's no free-for-all. Employees should know exactly what their employer's policies are for email and Internet usage, because workers are losing their jobs after computer-based missteps. Here are five ways to log on and lose your job:

1. Blog it up.

Blogger Chez Pazienza worked as a producer at CNN's "American Morning" until mid-February, when Pazienza says his boss informed him that the company discovered his name attached to blog posts written without CNN's approval. Pazienza was fired soon after. Pazienza runs Deus Ex Malcontent, where he writes about Oprah and President Bush with equal abandon. He hadn't identified himself as a CNN employee on the blog, but CNN spokeswoman Barbara Levin says company policy is that employees must first get permission to write for a non-CNN outlet. Levin didn't elaborate, noting that the company does not comment on personnel matters.

There's even a term for being fired because of a blog -- it's called being "dooced." While some blogging advocates say a well-executed blog can boost your career by presenting your best side to the HR executives Googling you, there are limitations. Dooce.com founder Heather Armstrong writes on her site that she lost her job a year after beginning the blog for writing entries that involved colleagues. She now tells site visitors, "Be ye not so stupid" and offers parameters for safe blogging: "Never write about work on the Internet unless your boss knows and sanctions the fact that you are writing about work on the Internet."

2. Play away.

Solitaire, that ever seductive way to while away the hours, is probably not a great choice for the workplace. New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg caught sight of a solitaire game on a city employee's computer screen in 2006 and fired him. "I expect all city workers, including myself, to work hard," Bloomberg said then.

Richard Bayer, an economist and chief operating officer of the Five O'Clock Club, an outplacement and career coaching organization, says employees who use a company computer for personal matters on company time -- whether playing solitaire or checking on their 401(k)'s -- are essentially stealing from their employer.

"It's a new, 21st-century form of theft," Bayer says, adding that a couple of personal emails each day are within reason.

3. Look at pics.
Yes, those kind of pics. Think about this: Nearly one-third of bosses have fired workers for misusing the Internet, according to a recent study by the American Management Association and the ePolicy Institute. Eighty-four percent of those employers said the reason was the viewing, downloading, or uploading of inappropriate or offensive content. The Washington, D.C., city government recommended the termination of nine employees in January for allegedly looking at pornography sites at work.

The key here is privacy -- as in, tell yourself you have none. The computer system belongs to the company, and courts have consistently sided with employers when it comes to computer-related terminations, says Nancy Flynn, executive director of the ePolicy Institute.

4. Post your pics.

Social networking may quickly gain an air of formality. The mayor of tiny Arlington, Ore. (population nearly 500), grabbed headlines recently after she was recalled by voters. Among other issues, the residents were sharply divided over the propriety of photos of the mayor dressed in her underwear that were posted to her MySpace page.

Employers are beginning to monitor social networking sites, Flynn says. Not only do companies fear employees posting proprietary information, but they also don't want to find photos of the boss dancing on the table drunk at the holiday party. Opinions posted that run contrary to company values can also get employees into trouble.

5. Write R-rated emails.

More than a quarter of employers have sent an employee packing for email-related offenses, according to the American Management Association/ePolicy Institute survey, and 62 percent of those said it was for inappropriate or offensive language. When you write, just assume that someone inside the company is reading it. Most of the 43 percent of companies that monitor email do it automatically, but 40 percent have live human beings reading and reviewing it.

Employers largely are concerned with their legal liability, Flynn says, noting that a growing number of companies are choosing to archive electronically stored information, rather than erase it, and it's subject to discovery in a federal lawsuit.

Copyrighted, U.S.News & World Report, L.P. All rights reserved.

link (http://hotjobs.yahoo.com/jobseeker/tools/ept/printallept.html?post=355&eptTemplete=careerarticles)

peeper
05-04-2008, 11:11 PM
yep! i been warned already about the emails...they didn't say anything about being here, tho.

ratid
05-04-2008, 11:21 PM
5. Write R-rated emails.

More than a quarter of employers have sent an employee packing for email-related offenses, according to the American Management Association/ePolicy Institute survey, and 62 percent of those said it was for inappropriate or offensive language. When you write, just assume that someone inside the company is reading it. Most of the 43 percent of companies that monitor email do it automatically, but 40 percent have live human beings reading and reviewing it.

Employers largely are concerned with their legal liability, Flynn says, noting that a growing number of companies are choosing to archive electronically stored information, rather than erase it, and it's subject to discovery in a federal lawsuit.

Copyrighted, U.S.News & World Report, L.P. All rights reserved.

link (http://hotjobs.yahoo.com/jobseeker/tools/ept/printallept.html?post=355&eptTemplete=careerarticles)


my previous job was email recovery. deleting your email just removes it from
your eye sight. its still there on the server being backed up. for how long
depends on the company's policy. finance companies went from 2yrs to 7yrs
to permanent header and subject retention i believe.

ChocolateCity
05-05-2008, 02:07 AM
Now what about email through gmail as opposed to company mail...since it's internet based? That's a little different right? I would think the company owns your email account, so I can understand personal email going through the business account as being a bad thing.

ratid
05-05-2008, 07:49 AM
Now what about email through gmail as opposed to company mail...since it's internet based? That's a little different right? I would think the company owns your email account, so I can understand personal email going through the business account as being a bad thing.

They could block access to external email as they have no control over that.
Better to keep it out than worry.

ChocolateCity
05-05-2008, 05:09 PM
They could block access to external email as they have no control over that.
Better to keep it out than worry.

Thanks R(h)atid! I usually use my gmail account for anything personal.

Oblivi
05-14-2008, 09:58 PM
i try to use the computer at my job for NOTHING personal cause I have the type of boss that may put a key stroke recorder on the PC's. I cant mess with her scandalous ass!

Soundwave
05-14-2008, 11:02 PM
Half of this is common sense though.

I just recently started a new job and already within weeks of me being there people where getting fired over E-mail, and I mean just dumb common sense stuff that they should have known better.

Trurida18
05-14-2008, 11:56 PM
people are just stupid as shit now a days

they act like they dont know people like me can READ THEIR FUCKIN EMAILS AT ANY GIVEN POINT before it leaves the P.O........well either way they are screwed

hotrock11
05-15-2008, 12:18 AM
hrm

CoolBlackKnight
05-15-2008, 04:26 AM
^Werd.

.....

NYSOM718
05-15-2008, 12:15 PM
LOOK!!! THAT GUY THAT GOT CAUGHT PLAYIN' SOLITAIRE ON THE COMPANY'S COMPUTER IN '06, HE WAS PLAYIN' WHILE ON HIS LUNCH BREAK...AND HE STILL GETS FIRED?!?!? WHILE ON HIS BREAK??! THAT'S FUCKED UP...

supablackb
05-15-2008, 01:34 PM
yeah, half of this is common sense...

ItsDaddy
05-15-2008, 02:14 PM
LOOK!!! THAT GUY THAT GOT CAUGHT PLAYIN' SOLITAIRE ON THE COMPANY'S COMPUTER IN '06, HE WAS PLAYIN' WHILE ON HIS LUNCH BREAK...AND HE STILL GETS FIRED?!?!? WHILE ON HIS BREAK??! THAT'S FUCKED UP...

There has to be more too it, like they warned him 5x's or something... If I had a half-a-pennie for every time I seen a user use the computer for something that is not job related... I'd still be a millionaire.

I caught my boss looking at porn big as pop up sprang out of know where while he was showing me some notes... lol If anything, no one uses there computer for what it was intended because every job has downtime period.

ratid
05-15-2008, 02:23 PM
LOOK!!! THAT GUY THAT GOT CAUGHT PLAYIN' SOLITAIRE ON THE COMPANY'S COMPUTER IN '06, HE WAS PLAYIN' WHILE ON HIS LUNCH BREAK...AND HE STILL GETS FIRED?!?!? WHILE ON HIS BREAK??! THAT'S FUCKED UP...

some companies are not flexible with their computer use. i got a friend who works IT at
her job and can't even read a tech book during down time. some of the rules are ridiculous
imo.

Trurida18
05-15-2008, 05:56 PM
LOOK!!! THAT GUY THAT GOT CAUGHT PLAYIN' SOLITAIRE ON THE COMPANY'S COMPUTER IN '06, HE WAS PLAYIN' WHILE ON HIS LUNCH BREAK...AND HE STILL GETS FIRED?!?!? WHILE ON HIS BREAK??! THAT'S FUCKED UP...

yea thats over the fucking top! TALK ABOUT EXTREME....