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August 26th, 2010 by Nicky Savage

Law to prevent employers looking at Facebook pages?

I often snoop around the US news websites if I am in the office early to see what might be hitting our shores in the next few hours. Today – I read a piece from USAToday.com that got me thinking. The piece talks about a proposed new German law proposed by Interior Minister Thomas de Maiziere. The law, if passed would make it illegal for prospective employers to snoop on private internet postings. The law doesn’t prevent you from stalking through publicly available information but it does say that you cannot add a prospective employee as a friend and (in the words of USAToday “peek at  photos from that keg party in college”.

AP explains a little further:

“If an employer turns down an application with another reasoning it might be difficult to prove” that the negative answer was based on the Facebook postings, de Maiziere said.

A rejected job applicant who proves he or she was turned down based of violation of the new law could take the company to court and claim damages, he said.”

Now – I have interviewed a fair few people in my time – I will admit that (especially with grads) I tend to search for them on google, twitter, facebook etc etc to see if I can get any additional information. And yes- I have already decided whether I am likely to like them or not in advance based on what I find. If a potential grad has a good twitter following and engages on topics related to my clients then they look pretty good to me. If however (as did once happen) I see a facebook status update saying “can’t be ar*ed writing my interview presentation for tomorrow – going to wing it…” then I will think badly of the person and will bring it up in the interview and watch them squirm.

Most of the comments on the piece suggest that if someone is stupid enough to add someone they don’t know on facebook then they deserve to be judged based on their facebook content. I am not sure – it is a tricky one – knowing where the public / private boundry lies. I wonder whether as time goes on – we might start going back the other way – making less and less information available. Techcrunch writer and community ‘celeb’ Paul Carr has already shut down all his social networks – one of the reasons being “people who enjoy my day-job writing are inevitably disappointed by the humdrum reality of my actual life, as laid bare by social media.”

I use the networks for specific things – to share pics with friends on facebook (am approaching my sixth weekend of weddings / hens – it is useful) and to get information on twitter. I have friends that deleted their accounts for a while but are now back on. I am nosy- I like knowing what is going in the world – both with my friends and my ‘internet friends’. My accounts will stay open for now. But I won’t be accepting any people I don’t know as friends on facebook. Not that I am looking for a new job @wadds / @mynameisearl ;-)

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June 15th, 2010 by nicole.hudspith

An open letter to the Prime Minister

John Terry
Image via Wikipedia

Dear David,

Last week, I came across a rather interesting article that made me think of you and our government. In brief, an American married mother-of-three was caught committing two crimes in a public park in New York. Suzanne Corona was caught having sexual intercourse with her lover and charged with public lewdness as well as adultery, which is punishable by 90 days in jail and a $350 fine. Please click here for the full article published in The Daily Mail.

In New York this law is rarely used but still remains. If England does not have infidelity as a criminal offence – I would highly recommend instating it. Then there would be no need to cut costs in the public sector as enforcing this law could really help to reduce our deficit. In fact, John Terry and Ashley Cole could basically fund it all by themselves.

Thanks and best wishes

Nicole Hudspith

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November 20th, 2009 by Speed Budapest (Matt)

Daily News 20/11

Information Age – Two arrested in the UK over financially motivated Trojan
A man and a woman have been arrested in Manchester in connection with the zbot Trojan, the most widespread example of malware specifically designed to help hackers steal money from their victims.

Silicon.com – Outsourcers to fall victim to cloud computing rush
As businesses begin to host their IT systems in the cloud – instead of hiring outsourcers to maintain and integrate their systems – outsourcers could start to feel the pain, according to author and technology thinker Nicholas Carr.

The Guardian – Mandelson seeks to amend copyright law in new crackdown on filesharing
Lord Mandelson is seeking to amend the laws on copyright to give the government sweeping new powers against people accused of illegal downloading.

Computer Weekly – CERN prepares Large Hadron Collider for second firing
Scientists are preparing the world’s most powerful atom smasher to restart more than a year after it overheated and failed in initial trials. The Large Hadron Collider (LHC) at the European Organisation for Nuclear Research (CERN) laboratory near Geneva, Switzerland has been handed over for operation, according to the update service on Twitter.

IT PRO – Nokia says businesses want its netbook
Nokia has seen growing interest among companies for its first netbook or mini-laptop, a company executive said today. “When we launched the Booklet 3G … we thought it to be primarily a consumer device, but after the launch a big, growing interest is coming from companies,” Heikki Norta, head of Nokia corporate strategy, told a seminar.