You can pretty much ignore everything around you that doesn't violate company policies. Except child pornography. I did a PC refresh project at a local hospital when my coworker came across child pornography on a workstation. He reported it to our supervisor. Together they reported it security. They each had separate meetings with the security chief and the hospital attorney.
The worker -- a high-level administrator -- freaked out when he didn't get a new computer and his old computer sat on his desk without the hard drive. We stonewalled him on what happened to the hard drive, as security confiscated the hard drive as evidence. He spent a whole day running around like a chicken with his head cut off, unable to do any work and no one saying anything to him. Police were waiting for him the next morning. Because this was a hospital that had a reputation to protect, the news media didn't report on the case.
My father and my first boss taught to me complete my work first and then slack off because there was no more work to complete. Most people try to stretch things out during the day to look busy and get into a jam when something urgent crash lands on their desk. It's not my fault if my boss can't provide me with enough work to keep me busy all day.
I listed my membership on my resume, along with the ACM logo.
LinkedIn has a new feature to list your certifications and corresponding badges on your profile page. While checking it out, ACM was listed in the pulldown. I had an ACM membership while in college. I was wondering if becoming a member again and adding ACM to my resume would make a difference.
Recent investments will yield a slight profit.