Ask Slashdot: Companies That Force Employees To Join Social Networks? 364
First time accepted submitter rubeon writes "Companies can get a lot of mileage out of social networking services from the likes of Google or Facebook. Chat, document collaboration, and video conferencing using services like Google+ Hangouts or Facebook's Skype are seductive additions to an IT arsenal. But a lot of people have privacy concerns about these services, and there's no shortage of horror stories how these sites track and exploit their users' habits. Would you work for a company that forced its employees to join a social network?"
Why not, it's just another work tool (Score:5, Insightful)
Why not? (Score:5, Insightful)
They Can Make You Join... (Score:5, Insightful)
Maybe they can make it a condition of your job to join, but can they really make you use it? Just telling them that you don't post much because you're not that kind of guy or gal would be a hard argument for them to refute.
This is really a problem? (Score:4, Insightful)
There are so many things an employee can screw up online, I though most of the corporate and government employers would prefer you not be on a social network.
As for the question - who cares? Business accounts are business accounts. You can blog and facebook and plus all you want for the company with a company account. Just to let your business and personal life (accounts) mix. What's so hard about that?
Re:It's a paying job. (Score:5, Insightful)
Obviously
You choose the amount of information you put there.
Unless you are as paranoid as RMS, just sign up using your company email (or a throwaway one) and put the absolutely minimum amount of info.
I'd much prefer a paycheck to a bit of already-compromised privacy.
This
Re:Roll Your Own (Score:5, Insightful)
Why any company would trust sensitive internal information to Google is beyond me.
Re:Why not? (Score:4, Insightful)
Why would I have any problem working for a company that forced me to join a social network?
You might not, but some people have privacy hang-ups about them.
Especially since this sounds like a prospective employer, I'd tell the submitter to get a grip. Don't go work for a company that has fundamentally different morals or ethics than you do - that's going to end in disaster.
I wouldn't join with the same profile that I used personally.
The seems to be a current trend, but employers are going to have to get a grip too, Their employees use drugs, have sex, and shoot guns on the weekend (ideally not all at the same time). To pretend otherwise is fantasy and the stock of employees who will pretend that way is going to dry up over time.
Associate with people who like you for who you are and not who you pretend to be and your life will become more pleasant.
Re:Why not, it's just another work tool (Score:5, Insightful)
Sign up with a new account and compartmentalize your activities appropriately.
Unless a network enforces one account per individual.
Re:What?!?! (Score:5, Insightful)
While you are technically correct, you are ignoring economic realities and pressures. Sometimes just because you *can* quit doesn't mean that you will be able to find another job. There are places in the country where if you lose your job, you will have to move.
Business/Company account needs no personal info (Score:5, Insightful)
Sign up with a new account and compartmentalize your activities appropriately.
Unless a network enforces one account per individual.
With different emails, profiles, behaviors, etc how would they notice? Likes, interests, posts etc should be completely segregated between professional and personal. Maybe use different names as well, for example the formal Michael on the business account and the familiar Mike on the personal account. They can't really tell from IP. Maybe Michael is a father's account and Mike is a son's - again, avoid personal info like birthday's etc on the business account. A business account at a particular company has no need to contain birthdays, schools, etc.
Re:Why not, it's just another work tool (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Why not? (Score:4, Insightful)
More to the point, why isn't there an enterprise version of G+/FB that a company can keep isolated on their own network?
Why does a company need social networking in the first place for employees?
I can understand trying to follow the crowd and have a "Web 2.0" presence with all the bells and whistles like Facebook, Twitter, FourSquare, whatever. That's marketing and their never ending quest for the Douche Master Throne. I dislike advertising obviously.
What benefits are there to having the employees participate in a social network? What work activities are appropriate to be public? Is this just another new SEO trick? Are there organizational benefits?
I just don't get it. If you need communication tools, that is not social networking specific. Social networking can have them, but then again, so do many other platforms. Skype can be used to communicate. I have that for business since it makes it easier to communicate with people and is far more flexible then txt messaging (which I refuse to use). You can go for the most expensive communication and collaboration platforms out there like MS Sharepoint that comes to mind. I'm sure IBM probably has something as ridiculously expensive and proprietary too. Google can be used for the same thing.
The question posed does not make sense, either by you or the article submitter, because I fail to see any business value in social networking beyond marketing.
Re:That question actually is rather leading. (Score:5, Insightful)
Some customers I work with have grown so dependent on social software that they cannot tolerate even a minute of downtime. Social business is, in many ways, the wave of the future, and to criticize companies for trying to get on the bandwagon and realize the benefits for themselves is not something I'm prepared to do.
I think that corporate dependence on "social software" is kind of like dependence on crack: it's hard to go a minute without it but that's not because it's providing real benefits.
Yes, in some cases social tools are useful, but in most implementations I've heard about the users become dependent on it because it's their only option, not because it was the best option.
Another analogy: if the New York Fire Department switched from fire engines to wagons pulled by donkeys because other cities were doing it and donkey stock was through the roof, they'd use the donkeys all the time and dread donkey downtime, but that wouldn't indicate that donkeys were a better choice than engines.
Re:That question actually is rather leading. (Score:5, Insightful)
I'm not sure I understand your point. If they're dependent on it to the point where work stops getting done of the social network is down, and when significant and concrete cost savings can be proven (again, look at the use cases, I'm not going to repeat them here - I'll repeat that I'm not a marketer) it would become very difficult to make the case that the network being used is not at the very least *adequate* for the needs of the company whom is using it.
Some social networks and social software are better than others (I obviously have my opinions but I don't think I need to spell them out here as to which are which) but when a company is seeing tangible and measurable benefits trying to convince them that their solution is the wrong one is going to be an uphill battle.
Re:Can information leak in? (Score:5, Insightful)
I don't use any social networks, but I detected a serious problem when "friend" became a verb...
Re:My response to the manager or HR person.... (Score:5, Insightful)
I cannot say strongly enough how horrifically bad this advice is.
If you make a habit of going to HR when they ask you to do something that is even tangentially related to your job duties and essentially demand a payoff, if you last years it's pretty much a miracle. Hallelujah.
Just be yourself... weird like everyone else (Score:4, Insightful)
I distance my work and personal stuff, but they wanted me to follow them, so I did.... no big loss. I've got sufficiently non-mainstream opinions on enough stuff that they really don't want me tying things tight anyway... what with my whole (9-11 was an inside job, Ron Paul for President, Cold Fusion really works, Back to the Gold Standard, we're in the Greater Depression) view of the world... it's non-corporate friendly (besides, corporations aren't people anyway).
I'll patiently wait for JPM and the FED to implode while I read back issues of the stuff from the time monks for a very long time before anyone wants me to be their corporation's friend. ;-)
Be sufficiently human, and only other humans will want to around.... and some will value you highly. Heck, one might even help you make other humans. ;-)
Re:Birthdays (Score:2, Insightful)
|| avoid personal info like birthday's etc on the business account.
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| As I understand it, all major social networks operating in the United States collect date of birth to be COPPA compliant.
has no one ever thought of lying on the internet? Or should i patent is and make millions. this i like the google requirement of using you real name on google+, simple solution is to lie. you have no qualms about lie on license agreement for software saying that you have read and agree to the agreement, so why not telling a lie online.
Re:Why not, it's just another work tool (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Why not, it's just another work tool (Score:5, Insightful)
1936 Germany wasn't 1939 Germany either. But nobody did much and three years later, bam, it was.
Re:Why not, it's just another work tool (Score:5, Insightful)
Step 2: Nobody complains, because workarounds are easy
Step 3: Because everybody accepts the rules, they get turned into laws. You are now a criminal, and anyone who doesn't like you can have you arrested