[rescue] Do you remember when? Security software..... (waaay the f**k of topic)
N.Miller
vraptor at promessage.com
Sun Aug 17 11:19:13 CDT 2003
On Saturday, August 16, 2003, at 10:10 AM, Dave McGuire wrote:
> Companies are spending time, effort, and money to protect themselves
> from their employees because they're creating environments in which
> their employees hate their company. They no longer care about or
> respect their employees, on either a personal or professional level.
This is no different from what happened in the late 19th and very early
20th century. It *will* turn around and bite them on the ass--it may
take another generation, and a depression to do so, but it will happen.
> She got back from lunch one day and couldn't log into her
> machine...that's how she found out. They laid off four of the twelve
> people in her group with no notice and no severance.
> She got a letter of reference from her former boss, but she was the
> only one who did. The line to everyone else was "as a matter of
> company policy, we don't provide reference letters". When this policy
> was questioned, the response was "if we give someone a good reference
> and they perform badly at their new company, it reflects badly on us!"
> ...do you see something wrong with this?
I have a problem with the former. That approach completely sucks ass
because the people in her company didn't have the cojones to give the
bad news. I *hate* that shit.
The latter is typical, and is a legal liability issue. I know of *no*
corporation in Silicon Valley where you will get anything resembling a
"reference" from a company. If anyone contacts my former employers
(well, except for the one that went bankrupt ;-), all they will get is
"she worked here from X to Y, and these were her titles"--and even the
latter is a maybe. They will also answer if asked if there were any
legal issues surrounding my employment--i.e. were any charges ever laid
against me in the context of my employment, or any lawsuits [0].
This is the #1 reason why all personal references are highly
suspect--you can pretty much have anyone you want tell a "reference"
story.
=Nadine=
[0] The "charges" question gets asked regularly as there were a couple
of fairly large lawsuits in Silicon Valley in the early '90's due to
employees being fired for cause because of lawsuits/illegal activities
yet the new employers were not given that information when asked for
employment verification. Iirc, one of these cases involved Cisco. Of
course, you wonder, why then do they bother with background checks, if
they can't even turn up this sort of stuff.
More information about the rescue
mailing list