pcworld.com — Balancing your work and personal life on social networking tools such as Facebook has become more complex than ever -- and the dangers go beyond the well-publicized examples of posting party pictures to your profile.
Nov 22, 2008 View in Crawl 4
Closed AccountNov 23, 2008
I think it's less a matter of that "respect everyone's tastes and thoughts, no matter how unreasonable it is that you're asked to do so" political correctness and more a matter of not letting your boss or prospective employer see you drunk off your ass in Florida wearing a string of beads around your neck and nothing else... while you're supposed to be there on business.
Closed AccountNov 23, 2008
I dislike the idea of a central searchable database where people can find pictures of you just by knowing your name. Sure, you can make it less accessible, but then what is the having it up in the first place? All you need is 1 volunteer from every university to allow an interest to automatically crawl all the pictures of every student and you will have a name to face database of 95% of the college students in the country, and then some.
Closed AccountNov 24, 2008
in other words...she was just trying to say...don't put up a RAUNCHY profile pic
trindmystDec 1, 2008
In the perfect world self incrimination on the internet would have nothing to do with your position on the corporate ladder but as reality points this is hardly valid. The trick is to never post anything that you wouldn’t want a stranger to see or better yet still an employer.This article should’ve honestly been a few sentences at most.
buckillerDec 14, 2008
Seriously... and if employers dont like what they see, they arent the kind of people i would want to work with.
elternjobsMar 3, 2009
your next employer is watching you! martin <a class="user" href="http://www.elternjobs.de">http://www.elternjobs.de</a>