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If You Ever Wonder Why I Stay Anonymous…

Bloggers running into trouble during internships.

ON the first day of his internship last year, Andrew McDonald created a Web site for himself. It never occurred to him that his bosses might not like his naming it after the company and writing in it about what went on in their office.

For Mr. McDonald, the Web log he created, “I’m a Comedy Central Intern,” was merely a way to keep his friends apprised of his activities and to practice his humor writing. For Comedy Central, it was a corporate no-no — especially after it was mentioned on Gawker.com, the gossip Web site, attracting thousands of new readers.

“Not even a newborn puppy on a pink cloud is as cute as a secret work blog!” chirped Gawker, giddily providing the link to its audience.

But Comedy Central disagreed, asking him to change the name (He did, to “I’m an Intern in New York”) and to stop revealing how its brand of comedic sausage is stuffed.

Dumb, dumb, dumb. But a rookie mistake. You soon learn the cardinal rule, which is: Don’t Shit Where You Eat. There’s a reason that I’m anonymous, and also circumspect about where I work: if my bosses knew that I was writing a blog which occasionally referenced them, I could get fired. Also, I might have a hard time getting a job if I were “out” as a blogger, because interviewers might wonder, rightly, whether I might carelessly reveal privileged information or take a public position that was at odds with my employer’s or client’s.

There are circumstances in which it can be beneficial to be “out.” This was a topic that was discussed at Pro-Choice Bingo, where pretty much everyone but me was out and the question of posting photos taken there came up. I asked that my face not be shown. Most of the people there were either students, making a living from writing, or in the kinds of jobs where their blogging didn’t really matter. Scott Lemieux, an assistant professor at Hunter, said that his blog probably helped him in his job because it got his name out there and gave him opportunities to do things like write an upcoming article for The American Prospect on (IIRC — sorry, Scott) the case against the case against Roe. But he acknowledged that it’s a thorny issue for non-tenured faculty. He sticks pretty close to his area of expertise on LGM, but other non-tenured faculty — Bitch, Ph.D., for example — write extensively about their private lives and on topics that could not only be damaging when tenure decisions are made, but could also affect the way their students view them. So, they remain anonymous.

If you’re in the corporate world, too, it’s important to remember that when using company equipment, you have no free-speech rights:

“It is important that corporations make a choice as to what type of blogging they will allow,” said Alfred C. Frawley III, director of the intellectual property practice group at the law firm Preti Flaherty in Portland, Me.

While there are differences in laws among jurisdictions, from a legal perspective, he said, it is generally accepted that companies have the right to impose controls on their employees’ use of computers and other equipment used for communication.

As for content — information generated within a company — the law also allows employers to set limits, even on airing the company laundry outside the office, he said. Private employees do not receive the protection of the First Amendment because there is no government action involved, he said.

“If an employee deviates from the policy, it may be grounds for termination,” Mr. Frawley said.

My firm, luckily, is too small to have an IT person and too cheap to pay to have a freelancer trolling through hard drives and internet histories. Nevertheless, I’m careful to delete my cookies and files every night before I leave. I also don’t use firm email for personal communications — I’ve done too many document reviews where I’ve seen highly personal (sometimes pornographic) emails, some of which had been deleted (because they never go away) as part of a document request. And we see the ones that were deemed relevant (the porn one, I’m sure, was left in as character assassination), so we’re not seeing everything that was pulled from that person’s account. Though I’m sure their bosses are very interested in that.

But wait! This story is in the Style section, so that means the Times is just waiting to drop a cooked-up “trend” in your lap:

The problem for the employers is that, in a few highly publicized cases, public airing of workplace shenanigans has proved to be lucrative — and young people entering the workplace know it.

“The Devil Wears Prada,” Lauren Weisberger’s veiled account of her time working as an assistant to Anna Wintour, the Vogue editor, ushered in the modern “underling-tell-all” genre, abetted by other revenge-of-the-employee tales like “The Nanny Diaries,” by Emma McLaughlin and Nicola Kraus. Both became best sellers that will be showing up on movie screens, with “Devil” opening next month.

Busted bloggers like Jessica Cutler (a former Capitol Hill intern whose blog, Washingtonienne, is now a novel), Nadine Haobsh (a former beauty editor whose blog Jolie in NYC earned her a two-book deal) and Jeremy Blachman (a lawyer whose blog Anonymous Lawyer is being released as “Anonymous Lawyer: A Novel” this summer) were all interns, entry-level employees and worker bees who traded up on in-the-trade secrets.

The generation entering the work world has noticed.

“Everybody I’ve read about that got fired for having a blog is on to such great things,” said Kelly Kreth, 36, who was fired from her job as the marketing and public relations director at a real estate firm in Manhattan last fall for blogging about her co-workers.

That’s because you only read about the ones who have gone on to great things, Kelly. Or, those are the only ones you choose to remember. Of course, we know that the Times is using your blinkered view of the world to bolster its “trend” finding. Not everybody gets a book contract out of it; some people just get a pink slip.

Yeesh.


32 thoughts on If You Ever Wonder Why I Stay Anonymous…

  1. You’d think Comedy Central, of all places, would have a sense of humor about the whole thing.

  2. Now I know why one my fellow bloggers called the company he worked for, “TCIDNN” (The Company I Dare Not Name). Until, of course, he retired and admitted it was IBM.

  3. I blog anonymously because I would rather remain unknown. No one knows that I blog. I tell people I may start a blog after I retire some day, but I’ve been doing it for several years now.

    Perhaps I would get more readers at my blog if I used my name, address, and other personal info, but I would rather the work stand on its own. I blog rarely about my family and never about my work.

    Mostly I blog about current events and especially politics and I usually read news sites and blogs – such as this one – on the same subject. I comment on other blogs more than I blog on my own.

    Blogging is way more fun than a paper journal in some desk, and when I click submit, I’m published. Is this a great country or what?

    Blogs are the best thing to happen to journalism since the First Amendment.

  4. Never thought of deleting my cookies every night-great idea. Question: you know when you delete the temp files it asks if you want to delete offline files – is this safe to do? (I’m not hugely tech savvy) is it just deleting temp files created by the websites I view?

  5. I might have a hard time getting a job if…..I take a public position that was at odds with my employer’s or client’s.

    If you don’t agree with the practices of the company or your clients, then why would you want to work there?

  6. Because homelessness is not appealing and every month the landlord expects her to pay the rent? Not everyone has the option of choosing a job that meets their every specification.

  7. And not every policy or practice with which I disagree would be worth quitting over. There’s always going to be something that bugs you about your job, even if it’s just the way they handle… I don’t know, buying coffee for the office.

    I blog semi-anonymously because I have no desire to get into lengthy political discussions about my work. Or rather, I’d prefer to do so elsewhere. I work on civil liberties issues all day, I’m committed and I put in long hours, so when I get home, I just want to chat about cooking and recipes, and oh, look at this funny cartoon I found online today. But I don’t try very hard to hide or reveal my real life identity.

  8. j0lt: Yes, that’s okay. Actually, even better is to use Firefox, as it makes all of that a (goes and counts) 3-click process. Maybe four in some cases. Even better is if you use Firefox on a thumbdrive, but that’s generally reserved for the truly paranoid.

  9. Not everyone has the option of choosing a job that meets their every specification.

    True, see Eherenrich, Barabara: Bait and Switched.

    I blog anonymously because I will in the future be expected to publish stuff, and I don’t want future persons looking for my professional writing to get the punkassblog stuff. My opinions about fad diets or the da Vinci Code are of no business to anyone who is googling my real name. I’m also careful to not blog about or at work because I’m under a non-disclosure and I’d hate to even give them a second’s worry that I’d violate it. Kyso Kisaen, on the other hand, doesn’t have a job to write about.

  10. I’m not anonymous — didn’t think of that when I started my blog — but I am circumspect. And upfront about my blogging. When I was jobhunting, I’d always mention my blog on my second interview, explain my personal policy (I never mention the company name and obscure identifying features, and studied competitive intelligence which means I understand how much can be gleaned), and ask if the manager has any concerns or wishes to set any further guidelines.

    And so far, no problems. In fact, I seem to have become the company’s go-to person for questions about weblogs.

    [BTW, generally the existence of my blog comes as no surprise, because I watched the server logs and knew potential employers were Googling me before interviews.]

  11. I’m flabbergasted the kid didn’t get fired. A NON-Dooce situation? They just asked him to change the name and stop blogging about work and let it go? That’s massively nice of them in this day and age.

  12. There are programs out there, such as E-Blaster, that can be installed on your computer that capture every keystroke you make and log in where you visit on the internet, and can even track your IM conversations. Companies will use these programs in the name of productivity to “spy” on what you do with your time at work. There are also programs that can actually watch what you doing remotely–every thing you see on your screen they see on theirs.And these programs do this will no interuption to your work, so you have no idea it is happening.

    I worked on and off in IT, and I am also amazed at how personal people thought their files were when in fact they are quite open, even when spying isn’t occuring.

    At a law firm I worked at, we once were tasked to make an e-mail message “disappear” so it would not be found in document request. Very unethical.

  13. If you don’t agree with the practices of the company or your clients, then why would you want to work there?

    You don’t work for a living, do you?

  14. [BTW, generally the existence of my blog comes as no surprise, because I watched the server logs and knew potential employers were Googling me before interviews.]

    I have heard that this has become standard practice in HR. Also, they love looking up those controversial My Space pages.

    I look up potential babysitters on myspace to get some insight on them before I let them watch my kids.

  15. I used to bemoan the fact that I have such a common first and last name (and Gordon is a pseudo, of course) that no domain names are available that match any permutation of them. Then I realized that there was a very nice flip side to it as well.

  16. I’m doomed. I developed a lengthy Internet presence under my own name before Google existed, and didn’t go pseudonymous in time.

    I just try to avoid saying much about my work. My boss reads my blog, so I’ll find out quickly if I ever go over the line :-).

  17. I don’t blog. I don’t do myspace or friendster. My personal life is mine alone, and I honestly don’t understand why so many people feel that it’s really great to splash their personal lives all over such a public space. It seems that our government, and big businesses (really the same thing) have been violating our privacy for so long that people think having no privacy is the norm, so it’s wonderful to tell the world about my horrible snotty sinus infection and how much I hate my doctor. (No, I don’t have a sinus infection and I love my doctor. Just making a point.)

    I could conceivably do a political blog under a pseudonym, but honestly, there are so many excellent political blogs out there (like Feministe) that I don’t wish to compete. I do a fair amount of commenting on other blogs, and I think this is enough of an outlet for my views.

  18. so it’s wonderful to tell the world about my horrible snotty sinus infection and how much I hate my doctor.

    That pretty much sums up my blog when I had one, if you substitute something else for sinus infection and keep in mind that I really only deeply dislike one of my nine doctors. I could explain, but I have a feeling you wouldn’t find my justification especially convincing. But I definitely blogged anonymously. I don’t want someone googling me and finding a long treatise about how to cope when you’re required to store stool samples in your refrigerator.

    Some of my very favorite blogs are personal blogs. But then, I also like reality television. I think I may just be deeply voyeuristic.

  19. I blog pseudonymously, and even before I started friends-locking my journal I kept most personal or revealing information under a filter.

    If you google my full name, the results on me are an appearance in community theater, my listing as a Greek tutor, a quote in an article about the popularity of laptops among college students, and a list of students in a web-taught course. Most of the other results are for a triathalon runner, which I certainly am not. Fun stuff.

    I met a friend for drinks tonight, and she told me about the project she’s working on for a summer course in publishing. It involves looking at people who are “internet famous” and how that fame rarely transfers to meatspace. It should be interesting, if only because she’s planning to use her own artwork as well as her writing, and she’s quite talented.

  20. Nearly everybody has to have a job to eat, pay rent, and care for a family. I am no different. I’m in graduate school, but I’m also a teacher. There were several years between college and graduate school in which I worked for a publishing company and an art museum. Last year, I was an academic advisor. None of this matters; I don’t feel like I need to prove myself to strangers, but I do feel I should stick up for myself and clarify what I meant.

    When I initially said, “why would you want to work there?” I was referring to working for companies in which you have a large moral objection to what the company stood for….etc. Examples for me would include Dow Chemical, Wal-Mart or some kind of gig as a corporate lawyer defending companies that exploit foreign workers, trash the environment, and put profits before people. No matter how badly I’m hurting for money, there isn’t a chance in hell I would consider applying. However, unlike say, textile workers in Bangladesh, I am privileged with a large selection.

    I feel like I’ve done my part in the companies I’ve worked for. Someone mentioned coffee, for example. I’ve found it surprisingly easy to convince my boss that there are better, more worker/community friendly coffees out there then Folgers and Starbucks.

    Again, I’m referring to major moral objections, not trivial stuff. When working for a small organization, I think many people would be surprised to learn what a difference they can make. For me, it’s always been easier to be honest with who I am.

  21. Excellent retort, Kyle.

    On an off-note: try–if you haven’t already–Caranavi Oro coffee. It’s USDA/QCS organic, and the people who pick the beans actually benefit from their hard work. Global Beans.

    Plus, it’s damn good coffee.

  22. ‘Pro – Choice Bingo’ ?!

    Bahahahahahahahah!!!! bwa…bwa…Bahahahahahahahahahahaha!!!!

  23. I took my real name off my blog (not that I even really use it anymore), stopped putting my last name in comments, and use my maiden name on my facebook, because I had heard that employers will judge you not only on your political views, but also may not hire you if you share enough college drinking and other partying stories. They assume you won’t take work seriously, or will harrass others with your views (in the case of a conservative) or will pose a security hazard (in the case of a liberal)….or something.

    My father-in-law is really extreme about it, and says that we have no right to have any opinion on anything in this country until we are a CEO or celebrity, or someeone else people ” can’t touch” or fire. He told me not even to write letters to the editor in the NYT or anything like that, because my boss could read it, disagree, and fire me (or report me to NSA or something). I think that’s taking things a bit far.

    And yes, I think it’s extreme that political views and (perfectly legal) partying are hire-fire situations in today’s world, but like Sally said, I have to pay rent, so I follow the rules now. But alas, my blog and articles still come up in the Google cache.

  24. At a law firm I worked at, we once were tasked to make an e-mail message “disappear” so it would not be found in document request. Very unethical.

    I’m usually the one seeking the documents, not producing them. We always suspect it goes on. In some cases (and with some firms) we get the smoking guns, and sometimes we do not. When we don’t find what we expect, we always wonder: were the really circumspect in what they wrote; or did they destroy it?

    Listen up, big-firm junior associates (especially that one firm that we all know does it — you know who you are, and we do too): if you’re going to tank an e-mail, if someone has a copy at home or on a home directory and I get it and I can show that counsel killed it off the server, I’ll go after your ticket. I’ll take a 30b6 deposition of counsel to find out how it happened, and I’ll keep pulling at the bullshit story. I’ll move to compel internal firm communications under the crime-fraud exception. If I can show that a lawyer directed the disappearance, I’ll seek disbarment. That kind of relief is not granted often, but it does happen, and I will consider it my mission in life to destroy you. Even if I can’t catch you, you’ll have anxiety attacks every day for a year wondering if I’m going to get you. I know you do it, and I hate you and I want to take away your whole life so you have to live in a cardboard box. I shit you not.

  25. I don’t blog, I don’t have my own myspace or personal web site, I’ve always used a pseud when I’ve joined online forums.

    Thus, when my name is googled, the only things that come out about me (as opposed to other people with my name) are things I’ve had published.

    Many of those myspace idiots are going to be in for a rude shock someday when their blatherings and skanky pictures cost them a job or a potential relationship.

  26. For me, it’s always been easier to be honest with who I am.

    One thing I am thankful for each day is that I have a job where every day I make the world a little more, instead of a little less, like the one I want to live in (and that I still make a good living in spite of this choice).

  27. My name IRL is so darned common that Googling it produces over a million hits, leading off with a well-known porn star. I generally figure that if I can’t find myself amid all the noise, a prospective employer isn’t likely to either.

    That said, I do things on line under three different names, two pseudonyms, and my actual name, and if someone tried very hard, starting with a pseudonym, they might be able to connect them up – but since I’m not currently gainfully employed, I’m not too concerned.

  28. I am recalling tghe thread here about the NYU dweebs who were being asses about a contributer here at Feministe, and how they were all so certain that nothing they did online would affect any hiring decisions…

    I also blog semi-anon, partly because privacy is important to me, but more because privacy is even more important to my wife.

    There are subjects that I have thought about blogging on, but have shied away from for that reason.

    I may still write on those, and other personal issues, but it is not the same as when it is just my own life involved.

  29. My name is a lot more common than I expected, but fortunately, I share it with a real estate agent who uses it as a domain name. The first 10 or so pages on Google are her. I don’t think I show up until much later.

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