IBM Sued for Firing Alleged Internet Addict 341
globring sent us a link to a CNN article covering a trial with a unique defense. James Pacenza, a 58 year old Alabama man, has been fired from his position at IBM for visiting adult sites during working hours. The man is now suing the company for $5 Million, alleging that he is an internet addict. The plaintiff claims he visits these sites as a way of dealing with traumatic stress incurred in the Vietnam War. He claims that while he is addicted to sex and the internet, he never visited adult sites at work. Age-related issues, he says, are the cause of his filing. IBM, on its part, says that Pacenza was warned during a similar incident several months ago. Pacenza denies this as well.
Someone's lying here... (Score:5, Informative)
The CNN article states that this wasn't his first warning: ""Plaintiff was discharged by IBM because he visited an Internet chat room for a sexual experience during work after he had been previously warned," the company said."
Unique Defense? (Score:3, Interesting)
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Re:Someone's lying here... (Score:5, Funny)
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Re:Someone's lying here... (Score:4, Funny)
I've got your log right here... (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Someone's lying here... (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Someone's lying here... (Score:5, Insightful)
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Re:Snu snu?? (Score:5, Informative)
(That's one of my favorite episodes.)
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Correction (Score:2)
Re:Someone's lying here... (Score:4, Insightful)
Bottom line, if you are 6 mos from retiring with pension you should know to be on your best behavior. If you walk out the door with a company stapler, i don't care if you are a recovering klepto, out you go. (I consider deliberately wasting company time to be theft)
I hope this fellow loses his case and gets to pay IBM's attorneys.
Re:Someone's lying here... (Score:4, Insightful)
How can that not be a bad thing? If a company is more critical of an employee months away from retirement, that is by definition age discrimination. Sorry, but saving a few bucks is not justification for prejudice in the workplace.
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And you're mssing the disadvantage of DB pensions, which is that this benefit is pretty ill-defined.
If I make it 20 years, I won.
More like, "If your employer doesn't fire you to dodge paying benefits when you inevitably get to the point where the pension is worth more than the value of your additional labor AND the pension is fully funded and never raided", you won. Looking at the last 30 years, those are bigger if's than you may have thought.
Now,
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Reminds me of an incident that I once dealt with. (Score:5, Funny)
One of the VPs called us into his office to report a problem with his computer. Apparently somebody had ejaculated all over his keyboard. He wanted us to get rid of the soiled keyboard, and bring him a new one. Not really being in a position to ask questions, we just did what he wanted.
About a week later, the same VP is on the phone, telling us that there's more ejaculate on his keyboard. So we bring him a new keyboard, yet again.
Another week or so later, we get a third call from the same VP. This time we went to the President of the firm, and reported this incident to him. He assured us he would look into it. I'm not sure exactly what the outcome was, but the VP ended up leaving his job soon after. According to some of the secretaries near his office, there was a pretty serious confrontation between him and the President of the company. One of the secretaries quoted part of the VP's yelling: "Yes, I got my sperm on the keyboard! It's because I have a fucking masturbation addition!"
Re:Reminds me of an incident that I once dealt wit (Score:2)
So many jokes come to mind that my head just exploded. Is there somebody I can sue?
Re:Someone's lying here... (Score:4, Insightful)
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Right. And if someone has cancer, and is exhausted and nauseous after receiving their chemotherapy, you should fire him too?
Most medical professionals consider alcoholism a disease. I would expect a firm to assist the employee with treatment and support for some period of time. If the employee continues to abuse drink, it's not that difficult to set up a testing program. Long term drinkers ca
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Perhaps they considered a meeting from 8 years ago about the zero-tolerance policy to be a previous warning.
LK
Re:What about visiting Bible sites or /.? (Score:5, Informative)
Its just like you can't use racial slurs, sexually charged language, and other offensive things at work. Someone could be walking by, see your porn on your workstation, and be offended.
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So the boss is the boss, right?
By your logic, the company could also legitimately discriminate on the basis of politics, colour or religion. After all, it's their computer, right?
Hmm, our logs say you visited a Hindu website last month. Sorry, this is a Lutheran workplace; you're fired for abuse of work resources.
If an employer wants to make a rule that work computers can only be used for work, then fine. If an employer wants to make a rule that you can't stop work to read a newspaper at work, th
Re:What about visiting Bible sites or /.? (Score:4, Insightful)
No, because there are laws against discriminating against people on those bases. There is no law preventing you from discriminating against someone based on whether or not they visit porn sites, however, especially if they do it with your resources.
But if they start applying these unevenly, allowing employees to waste time all day on personal e-mails, irrelevant websites and tabloid newspapers, and then only jump on the employee visiting a site or reading a paper they don't like, then that's illegitimate control.
Not if they're up front about it. If they're going to be "uneven" about things, then as long as they declare an exhaustive list of categories of activity that will get you fired, I don't see how you can have a problem with it. If the computer use policy says "no porn" but doesn't say "no personal emails" (and I'd be amazed if it doesn't say something about it, possibly allowing "reasonable use" or similar) then personal email are fine and porn isn't and that's that. There's no guessing, there's no unfairness - everyone knows where they stand. It's not uneven when the rules apply equally to everyone.
Re:What about visiting Bible sites or /.? (Score:5, Informative)
Let's not speculate about what could be done: Read the actual rules. We sign a contract every year that we will follow IBM's Business Conduct Guidelines [ibm.com]. If you're curious, the short section on information and communication systems [ibm.com].
I think the rules are very reasonable. Does anything in there strike you as unreasonable?
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This kind of shit disgusts me. I started working in a steel mill in Buffalo in the 1950s. You should have heard some of the stuff that basically everyone there would say. It was some of the raunchiest, dirtiest, filthiest motherfucking stuff that you could ever imagine.
But you know what? Nobody went stupid about it, and got "
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The mills were an all-male work force. The mills are gone.
The world changes---and in looking back, sometimes our memories betray us.
Re:What about visiting Bible sites or /.? (Score:5, Insightful)
The flip side to that argument. (Score:2, Offtopic)
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Also, people are conditioned to think that "sex is bad OMG something must be done", so that's playing against you too.
I think it's generally understood that looking at porn at work is going to get you in trouble
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Hah. Companies don't have rules against things like adult sites because they want to be moral guardians, they do it because they're afraid of being sued. You don't have rules against visiting such sites during the day and someone else who IS offended by the stuff will sue for something like "creating a hostile workplace" if/when they see it on someone else's screen.
Most companies probably couldn't care less if it weren't
Re:What about visiting Bible sites or /.? (Score:5, Insightful)
"what gives any company the right to discriminate?"
The federal government gives them the obligation to discriminate. If the manager hadn't taken action, the employee who had caught him could have sued for sexual harassment, arguing that the sexual content on the computer made for a hostile work environment.
Sigh. (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Sigh. (Score:5, Funny)
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My Rights Online? (Score:4, Funny)
This has apparently been going on a long time, since I've never worked at IBM.
I think IBM owes us all some back pay.
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WTF? (Score:5, Funny)
Maybe I can get away with classifying my need to punch stupid people in the face as a disability. After all, I shouldn't be fired for that
Re:WTF? (Score:4, Interesting)
Of course, either way, this guy is screwed: it's not illegal discrimination to fire someone for mental issues, especially when they affect work performance or atmosphere. The whole point of anti-discrimination laws is to stop people from firing others for stuff that doesn't affect those things.
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IANAL, But I can't imagine it would be against the law to discriminate against someone solely on the basis of a disability if it could be proven that it is detrimental to the job performance. Chauffers must be able to see, for example.
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As long as it's actually critical to the job, you're right. You can't fire (or even fail to hire) someone because they can't use the stairs into the building; but if the job description involves, for example, lifting and moving things that can't be done in a wheelchair, then someone in a wheelchair is legitimately unsuited for the job. There's also language about reasonable accommodations -- if you as an employer can make reasonable changes to the facilities, etc. then you are obligated to do so.
One exa
Re:WTF? (Score:5, Funny)
Re:WTF? (Score:4, Insightful)
you can't be fired for being addicted to porno
you can be fired for looking at porno on the job
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So this guy doesn't have a leg to stand on from the mental health standpoint. If he has PTSD, that's a separate issue, but it certainly wouldn't be a legitimate reason for viewing porn at work.
Sounds like h
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Pulease (Score:4, Insightful)
Sounds like he indeed visited during work hours or he wouldn't have had a reason at all to say this. It's IBM's system and rules. Tuff if you can't keep your hands (mental or physical) out of your pants at the job.
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As a G.I. soon to be in the civilian sector, woe betide any vet who tries to bullshit me about their problems.
If they have PTSD I will offer to go WITH them to the local VA and make damn sure they get help. If they are lying, that'll get documented too.
Fails the straight face test (Score:4, Funny)
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I realise that this is slashdot, and it's a bit much to ask people to read TFA, but you didn't even read the summary:
Let me repeat that: He claims that he did not visit adult sites at work.
Now it may still be a TOS violation if he
Re:Fails the straight face test (Score:5, Insightful)
Blatant nitpickery (Score:5, Informative)
Nitpicks matter in the law (Score:2)
He is defending his actions that caused him to get fired.
The point of an unlawful termination suit is to show that the employer broke the law. In raising that claim, he is opening himself to attack from the defense, which will point out the legality of their actions by showing that homeboy was doing things he wasn't supposed to be doing.
As long as they were within their legal rights in firing him, the fact that he was traumatized in the Vietnam War or has an addiction to porn don't really matter. My u
BOFH did it first! (Score:5, Funny)
"I don't actually think you CAN fire me for browsing porn.."
"Why not?"
"Well, I think I'm addicted to porn."
"I beg your pardon?"
"Addicted. To porn."
"You're joking!"
"Oh no. You see I'm fairly sure that the browsing of porn causes the release of testosterone, endorphins or something like that, which in turn causes a pleasure response in the body - or so my doctor will tell me if I ask. I'm addicted to that pleasure response, in much the same way as a drug addict is addicted to the pleasure they obtain from their drugs."
"So you're saying you have no control over your actions?"
"None."
"And you.... Believe that this is somehow the company's problem?"
"Oh no."
"Good."
"No, I think it's the company's fault. It's completely different."
"I think you'll find that to demonstrate fault, the company would have to be aware of a problem."
"They are. I filled out a workplace hazard form about it six months ago."
Just to move away from the precise issue for the (Score:3, Interesting)
On the current criteria, I'm slightly bemused as to why 'being thick' isn't allowed to count. It's not your fault, it puts you at a disadvantage, you can't change it etc.
Could anybody tell me why it's OK to discriminate against people being stupid in the workplace, but it's not if the mental/physical disability has a nice name?
Re:Just to move away from the precise issue for th (Score:2)
Re:Just to move away from the precise issue for th (Score:2, Informative)
No, it is not okay to discriminate against stupid people, at least in the USA. The U.S. Supreme Court ruled in Griggs vs Duke Power [wikipedia.org] that people could not be hired or promoted on the basis of general intelligence.
Internet Addict? (Score:5, Insightful)
You're not addicted to the medium, you're addicted to the content.
Re:Internet Addict? (Score:5, Funny)
IBM is not a good place to work. (Score:3, Funny)
If you dont have either of the above, consider seeking alternative employment.
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Is addiction a valid safety-net anyhow? (Score:5, Insightful)
If that were the case, it would mean that when Bobby and Johnny get caused smoking pot in the back during work hours, or when Sally gets caught with a needle in her veins in the washroom, they could claim that the company could not fire them because they were addicts. I think not.
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If drug use is current, they are not a protected class.
If drug use is current, but they are enrolled in some sort of drug treatment program, they ARE a protected class, and you cannot discriminate on them.
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Treatment program (Score:2)
I suppose in this case it would be if the guy goes to Wankaholics anonymous but still sneaks in a quickie at the computer during every lunch break.
This doesn't take into the account that while the guy might have a sex addiction, it does *not* require that
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Bullshit (Score:3, Insightful)
Might have a Case with the punishment differential (Score:5, Insightful)
He argues that other workers with worse offenses were disciplined less severely -- including a couple who had sex on a desk and were transferred.
Fred McNeese, a spokesman for Armonk-based IBM, would not comment.
Pacenza claims the company decided on dismissal only after improperly viewing his medical records, including psychiatric treatment, following the incident.
"In IBM management's eyes, plaintiff has an undesirable and self-professed record of psychological disability related to his Vietnam War combat experience," his papers claim.
Diederich says IBM workers who have drug or alcohol problems are placed in programs to help them, and Pacenza should have been offered the same. Instead, he says, Pacenza was told there were no programs for sex addiction or other psychological illnesses. He said Pacenza was also denied an appeal.
Diederich, who said he spent a year in Iraq as an Army lawyer, also argued that "A military combat veteran, if anyone, should be afforded a second chance, the benefit of doubt and afforded reasonable accommodation for combat-related disability."
Re:Might have a Case with the punishment different (Score:4, Informative)
C//
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Re:Might have a Case with the punishment different (Score:2)
There has been some rulings (in Mass) that said that disability insurance companies can't discriminate between mental and physical disabilities.
Americans with Disabilities Act (Score:2)
Amazing, I was able to use the mandatory ethics training I had to take at work in a conversation....hooray! Maybe?
If sex addiction... (Score:2)
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Looks simple enough (Score:5, Insightful)
International Business Machines Corp.
Seems pretty obvious. If IBM can produce those written policies, and has kept a written record of the previous warnings, Pacenza doesn't have a leg to stand on.
References to his past history in the military don't really seem all that relevant. Yes, many vets of Viet Name and other action carry the scars with them but that does not give them a right to totally ignore their employer's direction.
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Then he would be covered by ADA, right?
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References to his past history in the military don't really seem all that relevant. Yes, many vets of Viet Name and other action carry the scars with them but that does not give them a right to totally ignore their employer's direction.
Exactly. I don't think an event 37 years ago, traumatic though it may have been, is a reasonable excuse for not following the rules. Imagine, if you will, that his chosen method of coping with PTSD was drinking two pints of cheap gin a day. If, after showing up to work drunk and being warned this was not OK, he continued to do so, would not IBM be justified in canning him then? Does the man himself not bear the lion's share of the blame for not seeking some more work-friendly means of soothing his PTSD at
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Just to be clear, I do have friends who suffer from PTSD and even 40 years later (they were in Viet Nam early on) it has a daily imp
Addition to not working | un-workaholism (Score:2, Interesting)
Key Word is Accomodation (Score:3, Informative)
Send Buddy over to my department. I am willing to assume the company's Duty to Accommodate - plus it will help mitigate the Undue Hardship I'm experiencing in trying to locate 'The Really Good Shit' porn. I need a professional.
Just when you think I'm being a smart-ass, this isn't as far out there as you might think. I understand the motovation(s) for this sort of governance, but the implementation is getting pretty whacky. From the Canadian Human Rights Commissions website:
The duty to accommodate is the obligation to meaningfully incorporate diversity into the workplace. The duty to accommodate involves eliminating or changing rules, policies, practices and behaviours that discriminate against persons based on a group characteristic, such as race, national or ethnic origin, colour, religion, age, sex (including pregnancy), sexual orientation, marital status, family status and disability. emphasis mine
So my contribution to diversifying sexual orientation is that I wanna monkey spank all day sitting at my desk. Where's the beef? ... [Slaps Head]
http://www.chrc-ccdp.ca/preventing_discrimination/ page1-en.asp [chrc-ccdp.ca]
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Absurd (Score:2, Insightful)
Consistent standard needs to be applied (Score:4, Insightful)
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If indeed IBM simply transferred two other workers who had actual sex on a desk (one assumes this occurred when someone could witness it, rather than in a private office late one night), it's going to be hard for them to justify firing this guy for engaging in otherwise legal activity even though it was using company resources. That's not to say this is age discrimination or some other malfeasance on the part of IBM, but the lack of consistency is troubling.
Even if it was a private office, that sort of conduct on company property is inappropriate. Context is very important in these situations. The fact that looking at porn is "legal" is very dependent on context. Going an taking a shower at my house is legal, doing so without permission at someone else residence is not.
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This reminds me of a Grey's Anatomy episode. (Score:2)
Cry me a river... (Score:3, Insightful)
And before anybody accuses me of being insensitive here, I have a psychological disability myself But I recognize that it's *MY* problem, not other people's, and that it's up to me to make choices at work that do not put me in situations where my disability would reflect anything less than the most professional behaviour of which I am otherwise capable.
If you want to chat from work... (Score:2)
You don't want people to see that you're visiting nasty web sites? Well, set up a machine outside running Squid, drill a little hole into the firewall using ssh to connect the outside Squid with your favorite local port, which you now use as your web proxy.
And yes, this is also a wise thing to do even if you *not* visit nasty web sites but just sit in a company network which has an overly sensitive firewall e.g. blocking your
Has happened before (Score:4, Informative)
I Hate When Sick People Come to Work... (Score:3, Funny)
So, he knew he was "sick", yet still came into work. I hate it when sick people come into work.
He should have gotten treatment by himself. The article refers to "self medication". Too funny. IBM happens to have very good mental health benefits and he could have easily gotten into a discrete program through IBM. Or even by himself. My guess is that he would have even gotten paid leave for a short while.
I would have felt just a bit more sorry for him if he had spilled hot coffee on his lap at the McDonald's drive through. Would have gotten him the $5 million and also solved his, um, other problem.
What sort of pension arrangement is at IBM (Score:3, Insightful)
I think IBM should just allow him to retire early, and save themselves 6 months wages at the same time, or just give the guy his 6 months salary, damn, he has been working there for like only 19 years. It is not worth it to fight this guy.
Glad they fired him (Score:3, Insightful)
Firing addicts when they screw up their jobs due to their addiction, is good thing, not a bad thing. Make their self-medication have consequences. Make them hit bottom and want to recover.
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Re:Frivolous suits (Score:4, Interesting)
The law may not define alcoholism as a disease, however, Merriam Webster defines the word as follows:
2 : a condition of the living animal or plant body or of one of its parts that impairs normal functioning and is typically manifested by distinguishing signs and symptoms : SICKNESS, MALADY
3 : a harmful development (as in a social institution)
As for 2, alcohol is known to encourage the release of endorphins and dopamine, and I'm sure you know the functions of both. At some point, without alcohol, one cannot keep endorphin and dopamine levels high enough during sobriety to function correctly, ie, with a clear mind and without physical tremors.
As for 3, alcoholism causes many problems, what with decreased economic productivity, many many many problems in the family, and increased burden on the health system, regardless of whether the alcoholic has a job or not: If he does, it increases health insurance premiums, if he does not, it increases stress on government- and institutionally-funded health care programs.
Alcoholism IS a disease, being a drunk is not. There is a point of no return for a drunk, however, and THAT is when it becomes a disease.