Comment Re:Well... (Score 1) 837
My guess: medium sized city in a flyover state with low to zero desire to leave friends/family behind to make more money in a city that may or may not be appealing.
My guess: medium sized city in a flyover state with low to zero desire to leave friends/family behind to make more money in a city that may or may not be appealing.
I've seen first-hand at two companies that he's got something to worry about. Not during the interview, but before. At my last two employers it was standard process to do a quick google/facebook check and discard any applicants showing anything remotely controversial as part of their public persona. When you get 500+ resumes for one position, you do everything you can to whittle that stack down BEFORE you start bringing people in for interviews.
I'm not saying I agree with any of it, just relaying my bit of anecdotal evidence.
That's just setting yourself up for getting fired later for lying to your prospective employer during the interview process.
Wow, the quadruple good luck Google DNS server!
It sounds like you're not living the digital lifestyle. That's OK.
If you're living the digital lifestyle using VLC or other players would be second nature and you'd never turn your computer off. I've not turned my computer off in almost 10 years. Since I got an AppleTV, iTunes stays running all the time, too.
If you report a potential copyright/licensing problem to the right people, and they conclude that it is in the best interest of shareholders to take no action, that's okay. In my view, you have fulfilled your responsibility to bring the issue to their attention. You can only do so much.
I thought that would make you complicit and therefore a party to the crime. I always thought that short of an indemnification letter, once you the lowly IT worker knows laws are being broken you have legal exposure, period.
If they show up, tell reception not to let them past the waiting room. Call the cops IMMEDIATELY if they won't follow your instructions or requests (your business is private property.) Fetch the highest person in the company, preferably an officer, and tell them the BSA has no legal ability to search without a warrant or court order (which requires a lawsuit) and they need to shoo them away. The BSA should get nothing but the phone number of your lawyer.
Wrong answer. What will happen in about 4 hours, give or take, is armed US Marshalls arrive at your door with a search warrant. They will proceed to remove every single computer and you probably will never get them back. I'm lazy but do some googling - a linux shop did exactly what you recommended and the company was destroyed by seizure of their computers a few hours later.
Another tidbit of advice given was to write up a document which essentially held them hostage in return for your reputation: you agree not to report their use of illegitimate software in return for you never being there.
How is this not criminal blackmail? I'm not being snarky, I've always wondered.
All you proved with your anecdote is that you believe in America. I have no problem with that.
I *don't* believe in America.
I think America is run not by the people but by oligarchs. Nothing short of civil war from the people will change that.
Furthermore I have no idea how I would react/act/behave if such a thing came to pass, so yes, I am fully aware of the implications of including myself in my statements about "Americans."
An authority is a person who can tell you more about something than you really care to know.