Well, At Least It’s Out In The Open …

I remember a moment about a year ago when some report or academic article came out suggesting that there was some evidence of workplaces becoming more democratic, in a general and widespread sense. I ddn’t believe it, and said so, somewhere.

Thanks to Euan, linking to Suw Charman’s Strange Attractor, here’s a more realistic … imo … but hard to believe example of what management and executives generally think of the potential of blogs. Like Suw, my flabber is gasted.

At least now it’s clearer that many workers are cuaght up in the adult version of grade school … detentions if you step out of line, no recess, and for sure don’t read any nasty blogs that might have something resembling information on them … and heaven help the employee who blogs. The cited report even has some prison (er, school) rules in case some employees DO blog.

Thank goodness I am no longer a management consultant who might have helped to create and implement such idiocy – or at the very least nodded and said something like “it never hurts to be careful” .. so that the billing would continue.

From a report titled Web Logs: Blog Threat Management, by Janus Risk Management

Blogging is rapidly emerging as a threat to Internet users.

A blog (short for weblog) is a personal journal that is frequently updated and intended for general public consumption. Blogs generally represent the personality of the author or reflect the purpose of the Web site that hosts the blog. While blogs have a legitimate use, online journals pose serious threats to enterprise confidentiality, integrity, and availability. Blogs are potentially contributory to regulatory non-compliance in that blogs may not be documented communications and may also violate privacy considerations.

This presentation is designed for distribution to employees to raise their awareness of the importance of using extreme caution if and when it becomes necessary to visit blogs as part of the employee’s job performance.

This presentation provides specific information about how employees can reduce the risks associated with blogging and also at the end of the presentation there are three versions of a web log or blog policy. You can select the policy version most appropriate for your enterprise, brief employees on the need for the policy and the actual policy, and integrate it into the existing enterprise acceptable use policy.

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