Fired
For Blogging
NEW YORK, March 7, 2005
Flight attendant Ellen
Simonetti and former Google employee Mark Jen have more in common than their
love of blogging: They both got fired over it.
Simonetti had posted suggestive photographs of herself in uniform, while Jen
speculated online about his employer's finances. In neither case were their
bosses happy when they found out.
Though many companies have Internet guidelines that prohibit visiting porn
sites or forwarding racist jokes, few of the policies directly cover blogs, or
Web journals, particularly those written outside of work hours.
"There needs to be a dialogue going on between employers and
employees," said Heather Armstrong, a Web designer fired for commenting on
her blog about goings on at work. "There's this power of personal
publishing, and there needs to be rules about what you can or cannot say about
the workplace."
On blogs, which are by their very nature public forums, people often muse about
their likes and dislikes — of family, of friends, of co-workers.
Currently, some 27 percent of online U.S. adults read blogs, and 7 percent pen
them, according to The Pew Internet and American Life Project.
With search engines making it easy to find virtually anything anyone says in a
blog these days, companies are taking notice — and taking action.
"Because it's less formal, you're more likely to say something that would
offend your boss," said Lewis Maltby, president of the National Workrights
Institute, a workers' rights group.
Armstrong, who wouldn't name the company that fired her in 2002, said some of
her bosses took issue with such posts as "Comments Heard In, Around, and
Consequent to the Company Christmas Party Last Evening."
Soon after she was sacked, sympathizers coined the term "dooced,"
meaning "to have lost one's job because of one's Web site," in her
case dooce.com.
In 2003, a Microsoft Corp. contractor was fired after posting photographs of
computers from rival Apple Computer Inc. at a loading dock. Because Michael
Hanscom had described a building in his posting, Microsoft said he had violated
security, he said.
Last fall, Simonetti posted photographs of herself posing in a Delta Air Lines
uniform inside a company airplane, her bra partly revealed in one. She was
fired weeks later.
And in January, Jen was fired by Google over a blog that discussed life at the
company, even though he said "it's all publicly available information and
my personal thoughts and experiences."
Upon reflection, Jen said, he understood Google's concerns, given readers'
tendencies to read between the lines and draw conclusions based on "random
comments I made."
He said he hoped his case would prompt workers to "talk to their managers
at length about blogging before they begin."
Simonetti said she still doesn't know what she did wrong, saying that plenty of
employee Web sites and dating profiles identify Delta and include photos in
uniform.
"If there is a policy against this, why weren't all these people punished
before?" she said.
Delta and Google officials would only say that Simonetti and Jen no longer
worked for them.
In 1997, blogging pioneer Cameron Barrett lost a job at a small marketing firm
in Michigan after co-workers stumbled upon "experimental" short
stories from his creative writing class on his site. Now, he's much more
cautious, and he suspended his blog while campaigning for Wesley Clark during
the Democratic presidential primaries.
"I knew that everything I wrote would be scrutinized at (a) microscope
level by the other campaigns and their supporters," Barrett wrote in an
e-mail.
Annalee Newitz, a policy analyst at the civil liberties group Electronic
Frontier Foundation, said employees often "don't realize the First
Amendment doesn't protect their job."
The First Amendment only restricts government control of speech. So private
employers are free to fire at will in most states, as long as it's not
discriminatory or in retaliation for whistle-blowing or union organizing, labor
experts say.
A few companies actually do encourage personal, unofficial blogs and have
policies defining do's and don'ts for employees who post online. They recognize
that there can be value in engaging customers through thoughtful blogs.
"There's always a risk, but you always have that risk anytime you put an
employee on the phone," Forrester Research analyst Charlene Li said.
Sun Microsystems Inc. encourages blogging, offering server space for personal
blogs but warning bloggers not to reveal secrets or make financial disclosures
that might violate securities law. Sun also offers advice on how to keep blogs
interesting.
Only in rare cases are employees "unofficially asked to soften some
wording," said Tim Bray, the Sun policy's chief architect. Rather, he
said, the policy creates a structure for discussions between employees and
their managers.
Jeff Seul, general counsel at Groove Networks Inc., said the policy he wrote
for his company aims to tolerate dissent but not disrespect.
Microsoft refused to comment on Hanscom's case, but pointed out that it
encourages blogging and has more than 1,500 unofficial bloggers — the bulk on
Microsoft's official Web sites.
Christopher Cobey, an employment lawyer at the Littler Mendelson law firm's
Silicon Valley office, said publicity over recent blog-related firings has
prompted increased inquiries from companies about developing policies.
But some experts question whether a separate blogging policy is needed at all,
given more general employment guidelines and common sense.
Anil Dash, vice president at blog software developer Six Apart Ltd., said
publicized firings have been generally not over blogging but over other
violations that happened to be done through blogging.
Mark Dichter, chairman of labor and employment at the law firm Morgan, Lewis
& Bockius LLP, said policies can tie the hands of employers.
"It requires you to anticipate and draw lines," he said, "and
once you set policies then you get into litigation into which side of the line
it fell."