Want a job? Give Bozeman your Facebook, Google passwords
If you're planning to apply for a job with the city of Bozeman, Mont., be prepared to hand over much more than your references and resume.
The Rocky Mountain city instructs all job applicants to divulge their user names and passwords for "any Internet-based chat rooms, social clubs or forums, to include, but not limited to: Facebook, Google, Yahoo, YouTube.com, MySpace, etc."
"Before we offer people employment in a public trust position, we have a responsibility to do a thorough background check," Chuck Winn, Bozeman's assistant city manager, said in an interview on Thursday. "This is just a component of a thorough background check."
"Shame on us if there was information out there available about a person who applied for a job who was a child molester or had some sort of information out there on the Internet that kind of showed those propensities and we didn't look for it, we didn't ask, and we hired that person," Winn said. "In many ways we would have let the public down."
After local news reports highlighted the requirement on Wednesday, a firestorm of sorts has erupted online: irate e-mail messages have jammed mailboxes in City Hall, snarky Twitter.com comments have poked fun at a place once awarded the sobriquet of "All-America City," and a poll indicates 98 percent of respondents believe the city's policy amounts to an "invasion of privacy."
In addition to the usual requests for a home address and Social Security number, Bozeman's one-page background check form asks for the account information for "current personal or business Web sites, Web pages or memberships." It assures applicants that any information received "is confidential."
Winn said applicants are not required to divulge their social networking log-ins, but warned that there could be repercussions if they lie. "If you say 'I have no driving violation,' and then we run your driving record and it turns out you do, and through further questioning we find out you've been deceitful about it, than that would be cause (for firing)," he said. "That tells us a lot about that particular person. They lied to us and were deceitful."
Under the policy, which the city says has been in place for a few years, a police officer logs into and reviews the social-networking sites of people applying for public safety (that is, police and fire) jobs. For other jobs, the city's human resources department will perform the investigation.
An attorney for the Electronic Frontier Foundation, a digital rights group based in San Francisco, questioned Bozeman's decision to ask for user names and passwords.
"I think its indefensibly invasive and likely illegal as a violation of the First Amendment rights of job applicants," said EFF attorney Kevin Bankston. "Essentially, they're conditioning your application for employment on your waiving your First Amendment rights...and risking the security of your information by requiring you to share your password with them.. Where does it stop? How about a photocopy of your diary?"
One potential privacy concern is that accounts for Facebook and Google, among other sites, are used for more than just displaying photos, videos, and messages. They're also used for e-mail, meaning that a Bozeman investigator could review years of personal messages.
"I don't think the government can condition your application for employment on your giving up your First Amendment rights and your Fourth Amendment rights," Bankston said.
Another possible hitch: Some social-networking sites flatly prohibit disclosure of passwords, so a job seeker who complied with Bozeman's request could lose his account. Facebook's terms of service, for instance, say: "You will not share your password (or) let anyone else access your account."
Bozeman's Winn said the city does not want to be the "taste police" and is focused on looking for evidence of illegal activity. "They can log in themselves," he said. "If not, they can show us what's on their face page. 'Yes, I have a face page but I don't want to show it to you.' That's a fine answer. We'll use other resources out there to do a through background check. We owe it to the public."
CNET News' Elinor Mills contributed to this report.
Declan McCullagh is a contributor to CNET News and a correspondent for CBSNews.com who has covered the intersection of politics and technology for over a decade. Declan writes a regular feature called Taking Liberties, focused on individual and economic rights; you can bookmark his CBS News Taking Liberties site, or subscribe to the RSS feed. You can e-mail Declan at declan@cbsnews.com. 



The city does not have any moral or legal obligation to conduct a search of private communications of any applicant. This is clearly infringement of first amendment rights to do without consent, and as EFF attorney Kevin Bankston said it most likely constitutes an illegal requirement for employment... especially because it is a government entity and hiring for a tax funded position.
Doesn't anyone THINK in Bozeman?
This is one of those "Big Brother" freedom and rights violation in which the "Thought Police" totally invade your privacy. I hope that other governments and corporations don't adopt it. I hope that it does not become a tend. It will only lead to more rights and freedom violations.
Who can pass that sort of test, you give out your user IDs and passwords and then violate online terms of service rules and get your accounts deleted. Might as well file for the accounts to get deleted before applying for the job, and then say you had all accounts deleted, and then that would be the truth and they couldn't hold it against you. Either that or delete all accounts and then create new ones that are blank and give them the user ID and password to those new accounts and then they can see that you did nothing on those sites. Would they then refuse to hire you for being too boring?
It says list "any and all" and they give 3 blank lines LOL...
Does this mean I'd also have to give them my adultfriendfinder.com, bondage.com, and collarme.com logins; if I don't i'd have been "lying" and could be fired?
BTW,
Here's contact infor for his bosses....
Mayor Kaaren Jacobson
587-5968
kjacobson@bozeman.net
Deputy Mayor/Commissioner Jeff Krauss
582-2341
jkrauss@bozeman.net
Commissioner Jeff Rupp
586-1380
jrupp@bozeman.net
Commissioner Sean Becker
581-7571
sbecker@bozeman.net
Commissioner Eric Bryson
582-2347
ebryson@bozeman.net
To email the City Commission as a group, please send your email to agenda@bozeman.net, and the City Clerk's Office will forward your email to the Commission.
"Hi, I am from the IT department. Please give me your username and password."
Any person giving the keys to their personal, digital life would not think twice about this and fall for the oldest social engineering hack in the book.
Disgusting.
Time and time again we are warned "Do not give out your username or password to anyone who asks for it. We especially tell this to children. Shame on the City of Bozman for breaching common sense here. Ask for the website address sure, I can understand that - but lots of people use the social sites to complain about past and present employers as a way to vent frustrations safely.
It's like asking an applicant to allow the City to wire tap a phone, just so they can check on the conversations they are having to be sure they aren't part of a criminal organization. Last I checked you still need a warrant for that (even if it is a secret Homeland Security one).
- by lockerridge June 22, 2009 4:01 PM PDT
- Okay now this is getting absolutely ridiculous! I do not even think that companies or organizations have the right to drug test a person before they hire them. If after they hire someone, if that person messes up continuously or in a big way one time.. then they have the right to ask for .. demand... drug testing.. but not before!
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(21 Comments)This is an invasion of a person private life.. my life is not my work.. my life is mine and my work is the thing I do to have my life! The two should never mix up and become seen as one.. look a carreer is one thing.. that person basically gives themselves to the making of their persona as their job title.. but to just work in the Water Dept. at some town... nah.. this is really going above the board and I for one am shocked that people will subscribe to it to gain a job. That is living in total fear, and never able to have any fun on the internet! No one and I repeat no one represents themselves completely on the internet.. that is the fun and the beauty of it!