Judges Rule Google Search by Employer Not Illegal 185
An anonymous reader passed us a link to an Ars Technica article about a failed lawsuit over a Google search. A federal circuit court of appeals has upheld the original ruling against David Mullins, who claimed that Googling his name constituted ex parte communications prior to firing him. "Through a series of events, Mullins' employer found that he had misused his government vehicle and government funds for his own purposes — such as sleeping in his car and falsifying hotel documents to receive reimbursements, withdrawing unauthorized amounts of cash from the company card, and traveling to destinations sometimes hundreds of miles away from where he was supposed to be ... Mullins' supervisor provided a 23-page document listing 102 separate instances of misconduct. Mullins took issue with a Google search that Capell performed just before authorizing his firing. During this Google search, Capell found that Mullins had been fired from his previous job at the Smithsonian Institution and had been removed from Federal Service by the Air Force."
Does that mean (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Does that mean (Score:5, Funny)
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However, the phrase "due diligence" comes to mind.
As with testing your code, the sooner you can spot the bug, the more gooder.
Re:Does that mean (Score:5, Funny)
I remember that incident..... (Score:2)
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Re:Does that mean (Score:5, Insightful)
So yeah, if I had not known, I would have been unpleasantly surprised by the working environment. Google works both ways.
Most of the time people complain how "Google has ruined my chances ... blah blah" what they don't realize is that Google can also be used to ones' advantage. If Google can 'store' bad stuff it can also store 'good' stuff. It is not hard at all to create some fictitious online profile (use your name and go to some charity and help the poor kittens forums) so everyone one searching for your name will end up seeing that and think 'oh, how sweet!' Yeah, I thought about starting a personal PR business to manage people's online presense and mold it to whatever they want to appear, but I like programming better...Or at least that's what my online "presense" suggests ;-)
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Is that the one where one of the company president's memo to the company got leaked to the media several years ago? The one where he said he expected the parking lot to be full from 7 to 7 and meetings should only be held before 8 a.m. and after 5 p.m. so they didn't interrupt work? Their name wouldn't be something like C*rn*r by any chance? I walked away from them too. They use Disney management techniques. Very goofy (pun intended). Dress code was business formal or
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Right afterwards, I found that infamous memo [fuckedcompany.com], and it affirmed my decision.
I still shudder whenever I think about how close I was to accept a position there.
Re:Does that mean (Score:5, Insightful)
no google CANT ruin your chances. YOU ruin your chances.
when an employer google's you and finds you are a contributing editor to high times and run the largest Hemp growing blog on the web. Or finds your myspace and tells how you stole 3 laptops at your last job and bragged about screwing the man, drink like a fool and brag about going to work drunk,etc.....
THOSE ruin your chances.
google-ing me shows up that I am a Scientist, punk band drummer, am missing in IRAQ, design websites, photography, a scriptural scholar, and a editor at a prominent magazine.
Only if you post your own crap or are so incredibly bad that others post it on the net as a warning to others does the stuff get out there and get indexed. If someone knew the names I used for my research they would turn up my usenet posts going all the way back to the mid 90's but googling my name get's you lots of background noise and maybe my public blog that is sanitized for consumption.
This guy must have been a scumbag to get lots of positive hits on him in google or had a uncommon name like Xyzbt Fazatl'rt
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According to the story, his name was David Mullins. So I guess, he was in fact a scumbag!
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1. Google is good at retaining stuff -- it doesn't care if it is good or bad.
2. Google will show the most recent results at the top.
After you read point # (2) say "Bingo!" and go to Use
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Re:Does that mean (Score:5, Informative)
Sorted: all in order.
Sordid: dirty, immoral.
Re:Does that mean (Score:5, Funny)
Sordid: dirty, immoral."
Right, he sorted by professional, then personal past. Personally I would have sorted by good and evil, but everybody reads data differently.
Re:Does that mean (Score:4, Funny)
Google searches BY JUDGES ruled ok, sort of (Score:3, Informative)
From the decision [emphasis mine]:
"No ex-parte communication occurred when the Deciding
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Do keep in mind that what constitutes admissible evidence varies greatly by the nature of the 'court'. Civil court, for example, has somewhat looser standards than criminal court. Adminstrative pseudo courts are bound mainly by the manual and statute establishing them, and to an extent by legal decisions like the one in the TFA.
it wasn't (Score:5, Insightful)
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Shit, with a resume like that it's more like "President;" add in the whiskey, cocaine, and DUI and he's a shoe in.
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The thing I can't understand is why his employer, NOAA, had to use Google to find out about his past employement record. Isn't that sort of information shared between government agencies?
He won't get hired as a CEO, maybe as a junk bond investor though.
He could run for political office as a*politician* (Score:2)
Google before hiring (Score:4, Insightful)
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Re:Google before hiring (Score:4, Interesting)
While I was a little surprised to find out that they had Googled me, I wasn't upset by it -- in fact, I thought it was kind of funny, and in hindsight, I figured it was probably a good idea. And like someone else posted above, it works both ways. You can Google them (both the company, and your future potential boss/coworkers) to make sure the new environment will be a good fit for you, too.
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An employer/employee relationship is far more risky for both parties, I fail to why any potential employer wouldn't do the same.
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Employers usually do a search before hiring. (Score:5, Insightful)
A lot of employers do a search before hiring. If not on Google then with ChoicePoint.
That's one of the reasons those Duke lacrosse players were fighting their charges so hard. One of their parents told Leslie Stahl on "60 Minutes" after claiming that this case would ruin their kids life, that in the future when they apply for a job, the employer will Google their kids name and this case will come right to the top.
That's one of the dark sides of the internet. If you get accused of a crime, it's all over the internet. And even if you're acquitted, charges dropped, or found innocent, you're now all over the internet, and people will see that and immediately assume the worst.
Yeah, the guy in TFA appears to have committed all of those acts, but what about folks falsely accused or in the wrong place at the wrong time?
What was it? Keep repeating a lie and it becomes true? Well, on the internet, it's donw automatically.
Re:Employers usually do a search before hiring. (Score:5, Interesting)
And, when not hired for a job, do they EVER get told WHY exactly they weren't hired?
HR: "Sorry Mr. Jones, we didn't hire you because you murdered those children."
Candidate: "Oh, that again. I was AQUITTED, you know. The real killer CONFESSED and is currently serving time."
HR: *calls security*
No, they'd just get a happy little letter that they've declined to offer a job and will keep his information on file for x months blah blah blah.
It's all set to be the new discrimination. What used to be "we can't hire blacks, they'll steal from us!" now becomes "we can't hire people with any kind of bad press around them, they're obviously trouble!"
I wouldn't even be surprised if there were companies which specialize in revenge, where you can google bomb someone's name and associate it with something unpleasant for a fee.
Re:Employers usually do a search before hiring. (Score:5, Insightful)
You remind me of a friend of mine. in the late '90s when everyone, including him, was making great money, he was saving and investing - while his colleagues were buying BMWs and big houses.
When the bubble burst, he shrugged his shoulders, and took some time off - he was tired from working 60+ hours a week for years at a time. He had plenty of money saved so it wasn't any big deal. He did charity work, read, bummed around, got into shape, got a masters degree, etc....
When he started getting low on money, he tried to get a job again. Nothing.
He got feedback from two people - one indirectly and one directly.
The first guy just told a friend of his that if he was any good, he would never have been out of work. The second person, a doctor friend, just came out and asked, "Are you an alcoholic?"
The worst is ALWAYS assumed. And it's a sad thing with this society where the thought of somebody being good with their money and wanting to take time off every once in a while is actually a detriment to one's career. In a way, we are slaves to the corporate system. If you don't play the game correctly, you lose.
My friend is now doing menial work and trying to start a couple of businesses. He's actually happier overall. He does miss the 6 figure income, as do we all! Luckily, his wife is in medical.
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Happened to me - had to turn work down for family reasons and then the market tanked just as I was trying to get back into action. It can drive you a bit mad - I wondered if someone was spreading rumours about me or something.
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To this day, I still get teased for going into the interview for the position I eventually accepted with dreadlocks, suit, and my general discomfort with wearing shoes. (Funny what flip flops on the beach for a couple years does to your tolerance of shoes.) While all the interviews I had originally set up might have had the impression that "What the hell was I thinking?", I got offers for seven of the eight positions I interviewed
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Sadly, lots of employers don't even bother to read cover letters in the first pass. If you're lucky, they skim them to find out why you're applying for the position.
If there are employment holes greater than a month or two, your resume is likely to get round-filed before your cover letter is ever even looked at. It's even more true in companies that use software to pre-filter resumes.
My advice, having worked as a hiring manager, is to explain "
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we're going back to the future (Score:5, Interesting)
Then we had the Industrial Revolution, big cities, relatively cheap transatlantic travel, etc., and all of a sudden it was possible--difficult, but possible--to make a clean break with your past and forge a new life. Many of the life-affecting judgements that were previously made by busybody neighbors were instead made by impersonal bureaucrats.
Now, all sorts of personal information about us online and searchable, and folks who grew up with the Net are less inhibited than their elders about putting more personal stuff online [nymag.com]. It looks like the Internet is putting us all in the same virtual small town. I don't think that's an entirely good thing, but I don't see how it can be prevented.
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Re:Employers usually do a search before hiring. (Score:5, Insightful)
Newspapers in the UK are just as bad. People get accused of something, and before they have gone to trial, their name is mud. Now, alot of the time when they are found innocent, or the paper had a case of mistaken identity, if they even bother to point this out, it's in the tiniest retraction wedged inbetween some columnist and the sports.
I think it would be fairer if they were forced to commit the same amount of coverage to the real outcome.
As long as people remember that popular opinion (which most tabloids come under) is not fact, then things aren't too bad. If a google search comes up with a trend of behaviour, don't take it as gospel but use this as a basis for a more thourough background check via more conventional means, e.g: contacting past employers.
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And if I were ever to have this problem, the first thing I'd do create a single-page website with the retraction blown up to a full-screen jpeg, put a link to all the
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I often wonder about people with non-unique names who are interviewed. When a potential employer googles "John Smith", does he just give up because there are too many hits, or does Mr. Smith become unemployable?
If the solution we decide upon is #2, then we need to start the flooding now. Any decent blog s
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Criminal Identity Fraud (Score:2)
That blog is written by a Slashdotter. He posted it in under an identity fraud article a while ago. I linked to his first post.
In short rather that someone stealing his identity to make money, someone stole his identity and used it when arrested. The victim has been turned down for job after job with no reason given. He found out when he was being harassed by the cops and decided to do a search for himself and found numerous warrants, DUIs, etc.
Today's headlines, tomorrow's cat litter (Score:2)
Wahhh! Wahhh! (Score:4, Insightful)
Wahhh! Wahhh!
For as much as we rip government agencies for wasting money, three cheers for NOAA for tracking down this asshat and firing him.
The real question is, and one which is not answered in the article, are they going to get the money back from him?
Optimist (Score:2, Interesting)
But from the sounds of it, he should lay low and be thankful there aren't criminal charges. A Google search is no different from, say, searching newspaper clippings by hand. If reality is prejudicial to his employment, it's not his employer's fault.
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This is bullshit (Score:2, Insightful)
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Working for a company in the UK (only 40 people os nice and small), they partnered with a University in the states to develop software for phase 2 to 3 clinical drug trials. The University wanted someone on site to do business requirements, training, writing documentation, UAT, support and installation. I got the job. Pretty slick, own suite, at the customer site in an Academia settings 10 mins form wher
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5 months later I buy my first house. 1 after that? We all get laid off due to changes in the way the comp
Time factors (Score:2)
I
Unemployment Tax (Score:3, Informative)
And if you are a person who doesn't agree with unemployment then lower the taxes a lot first. My last pay check 33% want to taxes. So I work almost two days a week to pay taxes. Now if that was much lower I could save more and in down times wouldn't be as big of an issue
Just a quick clarification: In the US, unemployment taxes are paid exclusively by the employer; they are never deducted from the employee's pay. I realize that this may mean that employers simply pay you a slightly lower gross salary to off-set it, but it's definitely not part of the 33% (or whatever) you saw as a deduction from your check; it would be illegal for them to do so.
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Or you could just spend less. If you're having 33% deducted, then your salary is more than enough to live on while still saving and/or investing significant amounts of cash. Even in the states with the highest state tax burden 33% total tax withholding means, according to federal and state withholding guidelines [yourmoneypage.com], that your salary i
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Or are other deductions also being taken out? Like for medical, 401k, etc?
At any rate, if you can't make $2500+ take-home per month work for
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All this employee protection crap is bull shit. An employer should be able to hire/fire anyone they want without having to go through a bunch of red tape.
Its true. If those six year old kids didn't want to work in a coal mine, they should have started their own businesses. People should just be grateful that employers are kind enough to hire them, and if they don't like it, they can leave and find another job. Clearly business knows whats best for people. Just ask all those Enron employees how they're enjoying the benefits of the shares they were made to buy.
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Your employer doesn't pay unemployment benefits; you do. As you work.
While it is indeed the employer that sends in the check every month to the unemployment fund, the money being sent was taken (one way or another) from your benefits, as a cost of
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This is only true, if your paycheck would increase if none of these were mandatory, necessary or otherwise required.
What do you think the chances of that happening are?
I think we can all agree the likelihood of that is slim to none.
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It used to be that employers had all the rights, but then they learned that they could get away with all sorts of nasty tricks that not only increase profitability but ALSO put their employees into a state of permanent poverty so that they couldn't afford to quit or unionize no matter how miserable or mistreated they were. Things like intentionally having more workers show up than will be needed and sending the rest home without pay in order to save time and effort on proper scheduling,
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re: No, really, much of it is NOT bullshit.... (Score:2)
Unemployment wages come out of an employee's paycheck anyway! When they file for unemployment, there are restrictions on how long they can collect it, and how long they must have worked continuously before they qualify for it in the first place. That's to ensure they've paid enough in to the system to warrant taking it back out.
If you, as an employer, are "discouraged with the threat
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In the US, they do, pretty much. There are a few exceptions, relating to discrimination against those frequently discriminated against. Remember the recent Best Buy decision to fire their higher-paid salespeople? That's legal.
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At least in goverment service - this would mean a return to the Bad Old Days of the patronage system. There's a reason why the 'red tape' is there. (One could argue the red tape is excessive, etc... etc..., but the reason for its existence is a valid one.)
Unimployment INSURANCE (Score:2)
To give you an idea of how little of a deal this is, for my company, I pay about $150 in unemployment insurance premiums per YEAR.
You are probably thinking of severance pay, which some employers offer as a benefit, but it is certainly not required.
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This case is a perfect example of setting a precedent using a very bad example. This guy would have been found guilty without the Google search, but he's trying to get the case thrown out on a technicality. His only defence is that data gathered from Google is not verified to be truthful, but th
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In other news ... (Score:2, Insightful)
Honestly nothing to see here
So what (Score:5, Insightful)
How does this line up with HR guidelines? (Score:2)
I don't know if that's because of some privacy laws, or whether that's just standard "don't
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The reason for this is usually libel laws. If you say the the person was crap at their job, and it costs them getting another one, you have to be able to prove what you have said in a court of law. Since most sane people want to stay as far away from court as possible, it is better to refuse a reference rather than risk giving a bad one.
Even if you think you
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Wow, I've never seen "Right Work" defined so simply before....
Anyhow, the norm in many jurisdictions is to give neither positive nor negative recommendations, only to confirm that a person had been employed, in what position, and for how long.
Although it's tempting to say "We'll only give a recommendation if it is positive, and say nothing if it's negative," you create a situation where not commenting implies t
I'm going to suggest (Score:2)
There are many David Mullinses (Score:2)
I think it's distinctly unprofessional for an organisation to record the fact that it fired someone in a document on the Google-ac
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If they found out via Google that somebody named David Mullins was fired from several jobs, they can easily go back to the guy'
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In other news... (Score:2)
That's how to get fired (Score:5, Funny)
That's shocking. What sort of Draconian employment termination policies are in action here? Removed from federal service by the air force? Usually, I'd just have a quiet word to let the employee know their services are no longer required.
"Security, escort Mullins from the office. Yes, of course I mean with the F-16s..."
Comment removed (Score:3, Interesting)
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Government jobs (Score:2)
Re:Government jobs (Score:4, Informative)
I knew it. (Score:2)
2. If it's NOT in the internet however, it doesn't exist.
Soo .. what your saying is .. (Score:2)
I mean
Meh
Sounds to me like someone got caught and is trying for a sympathy play.
What I don't get... (Score:2)
Check references BEFORE hiring someone... (Score:2)
Don't they usually check out your references and previous employers BEFORE they hire you!? The whole point is to learn something about the character of the person you know nothing about. Once they already work for you and have show themselves to be a liar and thief you don't need a reference or google search to tell you that.
Moral of this story (Score:2)
On the other hand, if the information is correct, that'll teach you (or the next person) what the consequences of ones actions can be.
In real life, most people take rumors and inuendo with a grain of salt. They
What about... (Score:2)
Was he an idiot and posted it all to his LJ, or did someone leak his personal info?
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I still think if you are fired based solely on a Google search, then you would have plenty of cause for complaint, but in this case it is completely irrelevant.
Whether you should be fired or not all depends on the truthfulness of the information, and the content, not the method it was found.
If you're revealing information (on your blog, on the train, or drunk in a bar, or anywhere else that you don't have an expectation of privacy) that you're stealing from your employer and your employer overhears, you can bet your job you'll get fired (or at least an investigation opened)
This idiot was probably better off slinking away and looking for another job, then trying to fight this.
I believe this example disproves "There's no such thing as bad publicity."