| >we can make up hypotheticals all day long. So you're not going to point out any logical flaws in the scenario? You're not going to tell me why it's not a useful exercise? You're just going to avoid answering it because.... reasons. > Firing someone because they have a profile on triplebyte is just silly. Neither of the examples I gave were about firing. >I ge that you all need to justify your rage over this, but this really makes no sense I don't have any rage. My comment didn't express any rage. It gave two perfectly sound illustrations of why this information being public could put one at a disadvantage. >The world doesn't work the way you want to believe it does. Please elaborate. How does it work? And why is your experience about how it works more "correct" than the hundred of commenters here? >I don't know, maybe you work somewhere that's normal, but if you want to call something toxic, that's toxic. You can prove it by answering my question. What decision would a non-toxic, perfectly reasonable employer do? What would you do? I'm genuinely curious. >No boss I've ever had would care less about my online profiles. Same here. Aren't we lucky. Not everyone has had the same experience as evidenced by this thread. |
You've now admitted you're not even in the situation, so why debate for it other than internet gotcha points?