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Submission + - Job Seekers to Employers: Stop Yer Online Snooping (cio.com)

onehitwonder writes: "Employers are increasingly trolling the web for information about prospective employees that they can use in their hiring decisions. Consequently, career experts advise job seekers to not post any photos, opinions or information on blogs and social networking websites (like Slashdot) that a potential employer might find remotely off-putting. Instead of cautioning job seekers to censor their activity online, we job seekers and defenders of our civil liberties should tell employers to stop snooping and to stop judging our behavior outside of work, writes CIO.com Senior Online Editor Meridith Levinson. By basing professional hiring decisions on candidates' personal lives and beliefs, employers are effectively legislating people's behavior, and they're creating an online environment where people can't express their true beliefs, state their unvarnished opinions, be themselves, and that runs contrary to the free, communal ethos of the Web. Employers that exploit the Web to snoop into and judge people's personal lives infringe on everyone's privacy, and their actions verge on discrimination."
Businesses

Submission + - What If Yoda Ran IBM?

Esther Schindler writes: "The big vendors beat down the doors of large companies to get business, but a small-company gets the brush-off. One CIO wonders how to harness the powers of the Force, and get some big-company expertise to help the little guy.

Yeah, this is written from the boss's point of view (because, duh, it's a CIO who wrote it), but it certainly applies to anybody working in a smaller company who needs attention from a big vendor (for sales, tech support, whatever):

Herein lies the problem. Just because Sequoia is a $25 million dollar organization (in revenue), that does not exempt us from some of the same challenges that larger organizations endure. Although $25,000 may not seem like a large amount to IBM, imagine if they had many customers similar in size to Sequoia.


This guy's solution? "Let's imagine (with apologies to George Lucas) what Yoda might do if he were running a large consultancy....""
Christmas Cheer

Submission + - Which e-commerce system will fail THIS season?

Esther Schindler writes: "Jingle jingle. Every year, there's some retailer whose e-commerce or supply chain fails. And it's a big deal, since the holiday shopping season can make or break their year. The IT challenge encompasses everything from server scalability to supply chain management to search engine optimization to database cajoling to business integration to... well, come to think of it, just about everything. Yet, "in the high-stakes season of holiday shopping, so much can—and has—gone wrong for retailers, airlines and others."

Online shopping is expected to top $33 billion this year, up 21 percent from $27 billion in 2006, according to a study from Forrester Research and Shop.org, a professional group for online retailers. Eleven percent of the 2,521 U.S. consumers surveyed said they would do at least 75 percent of their holiday shopping online.


CIO.com has a big package of articles examining "Black Friday" and its implications (complete with a red bow on top) full of seasonal IT joy, all rolled up in E-Commerce and Supply Chain Systems Gird for Black Friday. It includes several articles, including:

Despite all this—and at least ten years of industry experience in e-commerce sales—we all just know that someone will make yet another big mistake. I wonder who it'll be this year?"

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