In the US, employers are asking job seekers to hand over their Facebook login details and passwords as part of the recruitment process. One law professor described the process as the equivalent of “requiring someone’s house keys”.
This is from news.com.au
WHEN Justin Bassett interviewed for a new job, he expected the usual questions about experience and references. So he was astonished when the interviewer asked for something else: his Facebook username and password.
Bassett, a New York City statistician, had just finished answering a few character questions when the interviewer turned to her computer to search for his Facebook page. But she couldn’t see his private profile. She turned back and asked him to hand over his login information.
Bassett refused and withdrew his application, saying he didn’t want to work for a company that would seek such personal information. But as the job market in the US steadily improves, other job candidates are confronting the same question from prospective employers, and some of them cannot afford to say no.
While some companies aren’t asking for the passwords so bluntly, they’re asking job seekers to log in to company computer’s during interviews, or having them “friend” HR managers.
Questions have been raised about the legality of the process and it’s the focus of proposed legislation in some US states that would “forbid public agencies from asking for access to social networks”.
But more generally, checking people’s social media profiles as part of the recruitment process is nothing new.
A couple of years ago when I was looking to hire my first MM employee – an editorial assistant – I wrote about the process in a column called: “Wanted: Job interview magic” and many people completely lost their shit.
At the time, I wrote in part:
Job interviews have changed. I didn’t realise this until recently when I had to recruit for the first time in years and found myself doing some surprising things. When I worked in magazines, I disliked hiring even more than firing. And this was problematic because when you spend a decade managing women in their twenties and thirties who frequently hop around between jobs, countries and babies, you want to be friends with recruitment.
Resumes? I’ve seen a few. Hundred.
One of the best things about leaving management and starting my own small business has been no more recruitment. But as mamamia.com.au continues to grow, and after three years of doing everything myself, I recently waved the white flag and admitted it was time to hire an editorial assistant.
I didn’t have time to trawl through a thousand resumes and nor did I have the stomach to disappoint 999 hopefuls. So I asked around my media contacts and edited it down to five good prospects.
That’s when it became interesting. Have I mentioned I find CVs useless? Mostly because they’re the work equivalent of the profiles on dating sites. Total spin.
Without even consciously thinking about it, the first thing I did before meeting each candidate was to look them up on Facebook and Twitter. Interesting…..
And then there were two.
I didn’t even need to glance at a single CV to eliminate three girls based on their social media profiles alone. One had a constant stream of Facebook updates bitching indiscreetly about her current job. Another evidently spent much of her time getting drunk and a third had some very strident views bordering on racist.
Is this fair? Sensible? Justified? Who knows but I did it. Yes, I made judgements on the character of job applicants based on social media profiles. And why wouldn’t I? It’s absurd to believe that how you behave on social media sites can be quarantined from you ‘proper’ work life. It can’t.
What you say online and what you choose to post on Twitter or Facebook is like your shop window. It’s not your bedroom. It’s not private (unless you have your privacy settings turned up which I would have thought was standard on Facebook these days but apparently not). And it’s a better indication of character than any written reference.
And here are some of the comments:
Clearly, asking someone for their Facebook password crosses a line and is probably illegal. But checking people out via Google, Twitter and Facebook are (I would have thought) very much standard practice in 2012.
There’s a lot at stake for employers too. What employees say or do on social media can impact on your company and your brand. As Kate pointed out in that comment above from 2010, I would only assume that a prospective employee would Google me, why wouldn’t I do the same?
And if you have a problem with that, I hope you’re not looking for a job….
What do you think? Would you freak if your boss – or prospective boss – checked out your social media profiles or googled you?

Job interviews have changed. I didn’t realise this until recently when I had to recruit for the first time in years and found myself doing some surprising things. When I worked in magazines, I disliked hiring even more than firing. And this was problematic because when you spend a decade managing women in their twenties and thirties who frequently hop around between jobs, countries and babies, you want to be friends with recruitment.








Comments
169 Comments so far
.. my name is unique, there is not another one of me in the world.. so when you Google me, or try and look me up on FB, then that is me!!
What a lot of people dont know, is if they comment on non-private group type sites on FB, they often come up in a Google search! I regularly Google myself to see what is showing up.. and I have always made it a rule to never say something in public that I could not say to that person’s face..
At the moment.. I have an old long lost friend back in my life via FB who is working with disadvantaged children and who keeps ‘likeing’ pictures and pages on FB that are very very questionable, near naked girls, obscene jokes and quotes.. I had to stop seeing her likes and comments as they were just so wrong – I’m sure half the girls she liked were underage.. Yet she doesn’t seem to understand that this stuff is public and could affect her job!! she just doesn’t get that… makes me shake my head.
I challenge anyone to Google AND Yahoo your name and see what comes up.. your digital footprint stays out there for a very very long time.
Whilst I disagree with asking for FB passwords or friending a HR manager (or anyone at current workplace (my rules)).. I actually would seriously Google them if I am in a HR position.. Buyer beware!!
PS: put your FB on ultra private settings, no searching, no messaging so it can’t come up.. then you can just deny you have one.. or disable it when job hunting, so then you aren’t lying.. “I dont use it anymore”
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Any company that asks for these details is not a company I would work for. I wouldn’t walk out of the interview, but I’d tell them that “Any social media activity I engage in is purely personal and unless it’s part of my job to tweet/blog on an official company account, is none of the company’s business”
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I’m in the market of looking for a new job at the moment. My Facebook is on the highest security settings possible and always has been. You cannot even find me through a search on Google BUT you can find other women with the same name in Australia and in the same state. What I want to know is how a prospective employer is going to know that these other women aren’t me? What could I possibly do to avoid being punished for a doppelgangers choices/mistakes/views/morals?
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I can’t vote on this one! I have cousins named both Brent and Trent, and it feels like I’m conishog between them. And I can’t put that feeling behind me long enough to focus on the names.
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I am so lucky – I share a name with a Nun who works at the Vatican. All looks rosy for me!
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Surely making decisions based on what you see on FB re a prospective employee borders on breaching Equal Opportunity Guidelines. If you make a decision based on a comment or a photo that has no bearing on the key selection criteria for a job, how can you justify that if an unsuccessful applicant asks for feedback as to why they didn’t get the job?
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Where is the legal requirement to give feedback on why seomone didn’t get the job?
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When I find out who is interviewing me for a prospective job I always look up their profile. You find out interesting things from them as well and possible conversational topics!
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I am an employer and I have not interviewed people based on their FB profile. One man had a shot of him naked in the shower with the photo stopping just short of sharing that little bit too much for my prospective customers … another spent a great deal of time talking about how wasted she was turning up to her job on a regular basis. I am investing a lot of time and money in each team member and they are given a great positive work environment to participate in … it is important to me that I build a team that fits together and with our company values. I am not obliged to hire everyone who applies and I am foolish if I don’t check out applicants fully. Checking social media is like checking someone’s references … only in this case, the applicant is writing their own reference. I’m with Mia!
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Not attacking you personally, Tricia, but what is with this trend of calling employees “team members” and when did it start? I’ve noticed it a lot. It strikes me as a creepy psychological trick to make people more invested in their jobs outside of work parameters. And those vomitrocious “team-building” exercises (i.e. enforced socialisation with colleagues on your own time). I don’t get it.
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I’m with Diana – while it’s nice to be able to get along with your colleagues during work hours, I hate the invisible workplace pressures that often exist to make sure that people socialise outside of work hours too.
I’m sure a lot of people will know what I’m talking about. Workplace friendships should be a bonus and should happen organically because two people have similar interests outside of work. You shouldn’t feel like you have to be part of the ‘popular’ crowd just to get ahead!
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Hell to the yes, I hate them too. There are people I work with I would NEVER associate with outside of work hours. I like to keep my work and my private life VERY separate. I won’t do work things in my private time. *except i make an exception to trawl my inbox for spam* A workmate in the same company, different department, once complained that because she didn’t go SHOPPING with the ladies on the weekend she wasn’t considered a ‘team player’!
That goes for my FB too. I have my supervisor as a friend because I felt obligated when she sent the request; a couple of workmates as friends but my General Manager is blocked.
I’d NEVER give over any security credentials – that goes against everything they try to teach us ‘users’ about avoiding hacking etc!
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I don’t think any Company you apply for a job with, or are already employed with them (who are changing policies), have the right to ask you for your private data. Simply deny you are on facebook or twitter. I most certainly, if asked, would not give a potential employer my facebook address or my twitter account (those are not work related) and they don’t have the right to ask for the information or sneakily follow or befriend so they can spy on me. If I was flaming my work colleagues or the company in public then I can understand why an employer would be angry, but my social media sites are mine to be shared with friends and family only. Everyone has to blow off steam after a shitty day, it doesn’t necessarily mean you honestly hate people you work with, or think your boss is an idiot. If you face this don’t let them bully you into giving them your details. If they say I assume that means you don’t want the job then that’s not the right company for you. Most companies don’t even allow you to use twitter or facebook during work hours so in that case I don’t think they should be asking for those details. I wouldn’t even mention you are on social media in the interview because you’re opening yourself up to them asking for your addresses.
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Hear, hear. 100 % agree with this comment.
I don’t mind if a potential employer was to google me (they won’t find anything incriminating), but to ask for anyone’s facebook details is highly intrusive.
My fb details are private, and I would state that very clearly to anyone asking. I’m not sure what the legal implications of this are (have seen contradictory articles discussing it recently) but, I hope we see a test case come up sooner, rather than later.
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Anything online is fair game for employers. It’s public and if you don’t want it out on the ‘interwebs’ don’t post it – or at the very least don’t post it under your real name. Facebook is supposed to be private, but it’s not really – any one of your ‘friends’ can copy your posts and forward. Twitter is the same.
I have a FB account under my real name – but it’s locked down pretty tight. In addition I don’t friend people from work, and I never post stuff about work. Most of my posts are pretty innocuous and contain nothing of interest to anyone outside of my close circle of friends. I have a twitter account, but not under my real name.
If someone asked me for my facebook password at an interview I would decline and take my chances. Most likely I would not want to work for them anyway!!
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If one of my friends chooses to ‘friend’ the hiring manager during the recruitment process, that’s their business. They shouldn’t have to, but it’s their choice. However, if one of my friends chooses to actually hand over their Facebook password, then it becomes my business too. I have content set to ‘friends only’ and therefore it invades MY privacy too.
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Bloody good point Caitlin!
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This is probably fair enough. I once saw you berating a junior employee in the ACP lifts and was so horrified by the way you spoke to her that I turned down two job offers in magazines you oversaw even though I would probably have never had to deal with you directly. If I could work that out from Facebook, that would be very handy.
The way you write about your children in your columns is also rather detached and disturbing – which would be helpful information should you ever be applying for a babysitting job, for instance. No way in the world would you get that.
I’m all for this.
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If I didn’t know Mia so well I would find your comment offensive but as I do I know that you could not be more wrong. And also that you are trolling
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It absolutely, 100% happened. I’ll admit it was over 10 years ago – perhaps she is all sweetness and light now.
I am not a frequent reader of this site, I followed a link from a friend because the topic interested me.
I am not so much trolling as venting.
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Or perhaps she’s a human being with good days and bad days like all of us? And maybe sharing a lift with someone isn’t a particularly accurate way of gauging their character?
I don’t want to be all “Leave Mia alone!!!111″ but this seems a bit unfair.
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You might be right. It was a fairly excessive bad day which moved her to treat someone in a way I would never dream of, but it may just have been a bad day.
The thing that moved me to write it was the thought that the girls who applied for the job with Mia would be able to identify themselves from her story – providing it’s a true one – and that struck me as being unfair and got me riled up.
I don’t feel in any way better for having written it.
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I don’t know about you, but I’ve worked in media for a long time (not in Australia, but other parts of the world).
My personal experience with it is that there are no bad people, only bad jobs and mis-promotion.
For example, a lot of editors get to be where they are not because they’re great people managers, but because they were great journalists – which obviously doesn’t always make them management material.
I guess the point I’m trying to make is that sometimes certain jobs can change people, turn them into someone they’re not for a little while.
I don’t know Mia personally, but I think it’s a bit unfair to attack someone on their own website, with an incident that happened over a decade ago that didn’t really personally affect you in any way.
People change, and judging someone based on their past is a bit high and mighty!
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LOL. Harsh. No wonder you’re not posting under your real name!
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Ummm… I’d assumed the reason her writing about her children was detached was to avoid telling millions of (unknown) readers intimate details about her children – basic *child* *protection*. I *applaud* Mia for this!
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Hey Renee,
I can categorically state that you are 100 shades of wrong.
I have never berated junior employees – not my style – and certainly not in a lift.
I think you may have had a big bowl of imagination for breakfast.
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I feel like there are a few ways I could go with this.
One – Facebook is my personal social network. It is something I do on my time, and my professional life has nothing to do with it. I have ‘friended’ those from work I see socially, but most people I work with are not my friends. If my boss were to turn around and ask for my facebook password, I’d demand a 24hr, 7 day pay packet. He gets access to my off time when I get paid for it, thanks, and if he wants my password (he would NEVER ask), he has access to me and can monitor me 24/7, therefore I should be paid for it.
Two – You can always do the exact same thing. If an employer asks for your Facebook password, ask them for theirs. Fairs fair. Maybe you want to make sure your new HR manager isn’t a complete jerk.
Three – if you don’t have your profile set to private, that’s your own fault. Don’t be surprised if people judge you by what you make available to the entire Internet. If you’re silly enough to post about how your boss is a massive bitch, or how you pulled a sickie to go to the Big Day Out, and get caught out, suck it up.
My workplace has a social networking rights and responsibilities code of conduct now – basically no slagging off your workmates/bosses or saying anything that can bring the company into disrepute. Considering the permanence of the internet, it pays to be careful about what you say. Also, do google yourself and make sure the first things that pop up aren’t bad.
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Please do not friend your colleagues on Facebook if you do not have to for work reasons. One of my favourite workmates from my old job recently had to resign because of the fallout from a Facebook status that mentioned the company. She is still unemployed, I feel so bad for her. One of her Facebook “friends” who worked with her reported her to HR.
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I don’t agree with requesting passwords, but anything that is freely available to the public is fair game. To me, if you’re stupid enough to have a profile that is completely unprotected and is full of photos of you getting drunk etc, you are demonstrating a complete lack of judgement and I wouldn’t want you working for me.
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I facebooked the girls who applied to casually babysit my kids. And the silliest thing was I didn’t even contact the prettiest one even though my husband and I are still crazy inlove after 10 years. Weird!
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I did not understand that. What with the pretty baby sitter and the marriage?
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So if you don’t have a FB page you lose the job because you’re too lazy to read my CV?
I think this a reflection on you and your character – something a future employee might like to be aware of too. Hopes to you MM goes well and you don’t have to.
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I don’t really mind if I’m being stalked on Facie or twitter, my settings are pretty tight. I would never give them my password. I would never hand out a password for my bank accounts or email accounts, Facebook would be no different.
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Another reason NOT to have a Facebook page – I must be in the minority but I value my privacy too much.
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As I’m now living overseas, I use Facebook to keep in touch with friends and family back home. I have pictures up of me on holidays, (some at the beach in a bikini), some posts on my political views and basically things that I would only share with people I knew on a personal level. It is certainly not appropriate for prospective employers to think they have a right to access this information. Sure, if I leave my profile public then I would expect all and any can browse it, but my profile privacy is set up so that only friends can view anything.
I went in for an interview recently and was surprised when one of the interviewers asked me if I had Facebook, as she had tried to look up my profile and couldn’t find it. I told her that I did but that it was private. They told me that they loved my CV and my cover letter, the interview went really well and they liked me but in the end I didn’t get the job. Now I wonder if it’s because they didn’t get to peek into my personal life.
I can understand looking someone up on Facebook or Twitter from the recruiter’s point of view, but so long as you don’t find anything disturbing in the public arena, it’s not right to disadvantage those who’d rather keep their profiles private.
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Couldn’t have said it better. Totally agree with you!
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I have a very common name, so it would be very unlikely a prospective employer would come up with anything online that was actually about me. They may come up with lots of tawdry things about people who share my name and may attribute them to me, and that is a concern. However, I wouldn’t log into my account for them or turn my password over, because however ok I am about my very boring online profile, I don’t know what my friends’ attitudes are. By turning over my account information, I would be granting access to my friends’ online profiles and I don’t think it’s ok to do that.
Back in the days pre-internet I was never asked to bring my photo albums and private mail for the perusal of a prospective employer, and that is the equivalent of what they are asking for now. It is wrong, regardless of what they may argue. It is an invasion of privacy.
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Admittedly, there are a couple of things on my social media I wouldn’t want my boss/coworkers to see… WHICH IS WHY THEY CAN’T SEE IT.
I never use my real name online, much less my full name. It shits my coworkers to tears, but I prefer to keep my work life and my social life separate.
I didn’t always have this policy, but I am very glad I do now.
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It crosses the line.
When you hand over a CV you give your home address. Your prospective employer may make assumptions about you and your life based on that.
But if you found out they had driven past your house to have a look, or wandered around there to suss you out, that would be a completely different thing.
To me, googling someone is harmless enough, but requiring your password or trying to access information you have chosen to restrict is completely invasive.
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Looking at my FB page with new perspective… it isn’t actually all that bad. I’d have no problems with a future employer looking at it – as long as they asked me first. Everything else is just normal shots of me, my family and my friends and my status updates are rather… mundane lol
For that matter, even if you google my name the only stuff that really comes up is:
a) articles I’ve written for the local paper
b) articles in the local paper about volunteer organisations I’m involved in
c) that one of my ancestors invented the first form of universal sign language (rather fitting considering that my entire family have a degenerative hearing loss issue).
I think the reason there’s nothing incriminating about me is because I’m extremely careful with what I post on FB and the way I behave when cameras are around. I watched someone I know become the laughing stock of the town because of his antics and I would never want that to happen to me.
The other reason is the joys of some of the volunteer work I do. I am constantly regarded as a public representative of two of those organisations so I have to present them in a good light – especially being that one is a family-orientated organisation that regularly participates in fundraising, local sponsorship and grant requests,
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I have my Facebook settings set so that I can’t be found through people searching me. I’m a Teacher s I was sick of kids trying to friend request me.
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I certainly agree with all the people who use ‘mum/grandma’ check for their FB content.
As an aside I was FB friends with my boss a while back and we worked in an industry where ‘getting hammered’ (with work, not booze) was an at least weekly occurrence. I hated seeing my boss complain on FB about how much work she had done that day, not least because I was her PA, so if she was getting hammered, so was I.
My new policy is “Don’t post anything that makes someone else want to vomit”! So, no bagging out to boss or workplace (everyone works hard and every job has something unbearable about it) and no nausea inducing comments about my husband/child/pets etc, and of course, no nude pictures!
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Lol, I checked out my new boss on facebook! She had some photos of her at a party that weren’t private.so I had a good perve!
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My Facebook page is set to private but there’s nothing dodgy on there. Recently my boss hinted that she was a bit miffed that some of her direct reports wouldn’t friend her on Facebook, my workplace is very social and a lot of people there are facebook friends but I think friending your boss on FB is a very bad idea!
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Isn’t that what Linkedin.com is for? Colleagues to keep in touch, therefore totally professional, nothing social but updating about work place, training, etc…. sorry I wouldnt friend work colleagues on facebook let alone my boss either.
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Ive googled myself and because my surname is unusual I’m the only one that comes up when you spell my name exactly. There’s not much stuff there and my Facebook page is private.
I don’t have anything really exciting on it, but there’s no way I’d be handing over my login. If they asked right I would login (and out) and let them peruse my page, but otherwise, no way.
As someone said below, if they wanted my details, well their details could also be legitimately handed over.
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Can we just drop the “branding”, “personal brand”, “brand you” etc bullshit marketing jargon? It’s vomitous. Thankew.
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I read a great article a while ago about making the most of your online profile so that when future employees google you, the first thing they find is real, up to date and professional information. I have a private unlisted Facebook profile, but after reading the article, I immediately updated my linked in page and it now appears at the top of my googled results.
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I pretty much thought that all employers looked at future employees facebook and twitter sites before calling them in for an interview. That’s why I am always careful about what I post on Facebook and Twitter.
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I think that Googling prospective employees is an unfortunate but inevitable sign of the times. I say unfortunate because there is a chance it could cause well-deserving employees to miss out on a first interview or job because of extremely unfair reasons (ie the colour of their skin, stuff about them online that they have no control about, stupid stuff they did when they were younger, their sexuality, their religion, the fact that they have kids etc etc…).
The lesson here for everyone is to be vigilant about security settings, be careful about what profile pictures you choose, monitor what appears about you online (Google yourself today!) and also be very careful about what appears on your supposedly private pages…. the world is a small place and a prospective employer only needs to know one of your Facebook friends to gain access to your page if they so desired.
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i assume it happens, although for me it is a detriment to my application because there happens to be a very famous Jessica Drake in the adult industry. It takes a lot of time to go through all those websites to find what is actually me.
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I just googled myself out of interest and found a mug shot of some delinquent teenager in the US. Hopefully the two of us are never confused for the other.
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If that’s the way my potential employer wanted to go (and I was willing), I would ask for their FB login details as well.
It has to work both ways.
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OMG yes! The perfect answer, if they said no then you could too! Excellent!
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There are so many issues with handing out Facebook passwords. Nobody should do it. Ever.
But as for potential employers doing a “Google stalk”, I have no problem with it. Anything I put online I’m prepared to face up to. It’s about personal brand.
The old six degrees of separation are probably more like four these days, and in some industries it’s even tighter knit.
Even if a company didn’t look me up on Facebook or Twitter, chances are someone who knew someone would be able to pass on all the information about me anyway.
I see Facebook and Twitter profiles (as well as blogs, LinkedIn etc) as beneficial when it comes to job hunting. I want people to Google me and think “I WANT this person to work for me”.
My Facebook account is private because I don’t want photos of my baby floating all over the internet, but there’s nothing on my account I’m embarrassed about. There are photos of me pulling funny faces and drinking wine, but if a potential employer thought that was inappropriate, then I wouldn’t want to work for them anyway.
It’s not about lying on your profiles to make yourself look better either. If you want to be perceived a certain way, then LIVE that way.
Google away, Mia.
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Just googled myself and there 6 pages of stuff on me (I have a fairly unique name being the only in Australia with this name). Though saying that, alot of things are sport related, with even stuff from school there and I also work for a University, so everytime I am mentioned in a page comes up in the search as well. The only think I didn’t like was Jerk.com. But when I went to remove my page, I found I didn’t actually have one (strange that it came up in the search though). Will be deleting my Hi5 page that I set up only so I would stop getting requests when I was in High School, didn’t know I had a Where are You Now page, so will delete that too. Will let you know later what else comes up
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Hi. I just googled my name, I am yet to find anything about myself, my Facebook is set to private so when I find it I imagin you won’t see anymore than my profile photo. I have however found several other girls facebook, myspace etc pages with my exact name, how can potential employers know it isn’t me, if they base there judgement on what they find they could be mistaken.
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Google me? Go for your life. Very, very boring. But give you my personal log in details? No way in hell.
ETA: There is nothing on Facebook etc that I wouldn’t want an employer to see, that’s not the point. It’s PRIVATE for a REASON!
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To me it seems OK to spy on my 13 year old daughter’s facebook as I am her parent and need to check – very occasionally – that things are ok – and they are in fact very boring and quite innocent thank goodness. But my password for my fb account is too private to give to an employer. I don’t mind them seeing my posts or what I “like” as that is all open to my fb friends. However my private messages are sometimes intimate discussions with girlfriends and family and I don’t think that is anyone else’s business (unless my daughter wants to retaliate and spy back on me which is fine and fair…)
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No way would I give my Facebook password and everyone will have different reasons for this. My birth father emails me on Facebook and no one even knows he exists besides me. I mean I don’t ever discuss it with anyone. So a potential employer can get stuffed…they would never get access to it. Stalk my full name and loads of stuff on the web, and that’s enough for them I think.
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Oh Please ……..
If you’ve put something inappropriate out there for the world to see (including the randoms that come and go from Facebook headquarters and anyone else that can hack into your account) don’t think about applying for a job where you will be in the public eye, working with children or working for any company that requires you to have morals and good judgement. If you want to talk like a whore (male or female), post naked pictures of yourself or others, vilify a person or race, berate your boss, co-workers or friends, and you haven’t got the guts to do it from the forecourt of the Sydney Opera House .. DO NOT PUT IT ON FACEBOOK!
I don’t care what anyone says or prints about who owns what on the world wide web …… everyone knows how to cut & paste – whats to stop anyone from cutting and pasting my “comments” on Facebook and storing them for a later date. It happens and you have got your head in the sand if you believe it doesn’t. Don’t believe for a minute that Facebook is a “cute touch feely” organisation that just wants to lure advertisers – THEY WILL SELL YOUR INFORMATION AT A MOMENTS NOTICE TO THE HIGHEST BIDDER – READ THE FINE FINE FINE PRINT.
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I’m the same online and offline. Which is lucky, as I am the only person with my name on the internet.
My facebook is locked down pretty solidly, but my twitter is open and I have a blog and another website where I write, so there’s no shortage of information on my opinions out there.
Yep, I’m a bit random and weird on twitter, but I’m a bit random and weird in life too – so if you don’t like me on twitter you probably won’t like me.
The only thing is I need to be careful as I’m married to a teacher. So I do censor myself a bit.
Also, I’m really grateful facebook & twitter weren’t around when I was a teen. I don’t need all my teen angst permanently around.
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Employers would be silly not to utilise the search function on social media. How people act in these public realms is a fair indication of their personalities – after all, if they do have a public profile this is how the outside world (including an employer’s clients) can view them. Most of us in the corporate world go by our full names – it’s on our business cards and our email signatures. What’s to stop an employer’s client from Googling their new account manager to find out their experience etc. only to find their publicly available social media profile? The values and attitudes you express on your social media aren’t likely to stray from those you hold at your ‘day job’.
Part of my job involves using social media for business – I’m smart enough to have a private profile (people who have a public personal Facebook page are either very silly, uninformed or exhibitionists). If someone did get access to view my account, they’d see photos of my partner and I heading to dinner, statuses about volunteer work I do, comments from friends wanting to catch up and location tags of me having a fun karaoke night out with my work colleagues. I’d like to think this is a pretty accurate portal of the values I have and the type of person I am
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I was AMAZED recently at how little protection people put up around their privacy.
I was interviewing for a job, and did my research on who was currently in the role, and therefore who they have in frame to replace.
The end result? I found out his professional career, AND his personal life as a cross dresser, and saw him in his speedos on holiday in greece with his boyfriend.
People have to get real and protect themselves. It’s called personal branding. Do you want me to see you in your speedos/bikini with your lovers before I meet you?? If so, cool. Make that your brand. If not, be aware of what image you are portraying on the inter-mer-net.
Because it’s just a few clicks away.
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My question is how do you know the person you have found on Twitter or Facebook is the right one? I know for a fact that there is another girl floating around Melbourne with the exact same name as me who is my age. Wouldn’t have a clue what she posts on social media, but regardless would hate to think that I was being overlooked on account of someone elses mistakes. I deleted both my Twitter and Facebook on New Years and have never felt better, so if they search me it certainly won’t be my results that show! Everything else is posted under a nickname or handle. You can’t be too careful!
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Stella. To that end I would say it is even more important to create your brand on the internet!! Buy your domain name. Put in a holding page. Own your own name on the internet.
Of course it all depends on what industry you work in.
But personally, I want to make sure that if someone googles my name they get me, and the image I want portrayed.
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I teach at university and have no qualms about checking out students facebook pages as a way for me to find out why they are not coming to class or handing in assignments. I have usually guessed where they are at – i.e. totally not interested in their studies – but then if they are stupid enough to have an open fb page with lots of posts about the music festival they went to or their weekend in the city or holiday to the Gold Coast when they should have been at class… it means I know they don’t have a leg to stand on if they ask me an extension on an assignment or have no reason why they are not attending classes. One of my colleagues didn’t think she could do it but I thought it was valid research.
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go for it, i say!
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Getting someone’s password is too far, but in general it seems perfectly reasonable to check online profiles of prospective employees to me.
I imagine that the number of applications empoyers get must be huge these days. It is so easy to access job ads over the net, and it’s possible to have very vague applications that can be sent off to many jobs (clearly this isn’t a great idea, but I’m sure people do it). So with the added bulk in applications that comes from the internet, it only seems fair that employers should be able to cut the number back to a reasonable size, through checking online portfolios.
I imagine hiring must be quite a difficult process; sometimes people look fantastic on paper, give a great interview, and then turn out to be hell to work with. There is the added problem of not really knowing if you can trust references. Sometimes in government jobs, where it is very difficult to fire people, a situation might arise where you don’t know whether the glowing reference someone has been given might possibly be just because his/her current boss can’t wait to get rid of him/her.
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