Should Employers Be Forbidden to Facebook You?

Facebook's Logo
Facebook's Logo on a computer screen in Brussels
REUTERS/Thierry Roge

If you live in Germany, don’t worry about those drunken party pictures on your wall. A job interviewer may not be allowed to see them.

As part of a workplace-privacy proposal, German lawmakers recommended restricting the access employers have to job applicants’ Facebook profiles, the New York Times reports. If the law passes, job recruiters could search publicly-available information and job sites like LinkedIn, but social sites like Facebook would be off-limits.

Germany has always been a stickler for personal privacy, having previously investigated Google and Apple for mining personal information. With this new bill, which has backing from Prime Minister Angela Merkel’s cabinet, employees can Facebook as they please — but employers may miss out on important information from potential workers. But until the bill passes, Germans, fix your privacy settings.

Subscribe to Megan Friedman on Facebook
Related Topics: facebook, Germany, jobs, social media, world, Business, Internet, World
  • Latest on NewsFeed

    Reuters

    Leveson Inquiry: Heather Mills, Daily Mail Editor Tell Two Sides of Phone-Hacking Scandal

    For months now, finger-pointing, accusations and justifications have been lobbed back and forth as editors, reporters, photographers, celebrities and experts have testified about the quality and slant of British press practices.

    Why Your Facebook “Friends” Probably Don’t Like YouSlate

    Pinterest

    What You Need to Know About Pinterest

    Though Facebook’s SEC filings are dominating headlines, social neophyte Pinterest is gaining traction and plenty of buzz as the newest social media darling.

  • http://newsfeed.time.com/2010/11/19/naked-sleepwalker-wins-big-in-libel-lawsuit/ Naked Sleepwalker Wins Big in Libel Lawsuit – TIME NewsFeed

    [...] (See other things that could get you in trouble with co-workers.) [...]

blog comments powered by Disqus