Mark Jen this week got a gentle schooling in the dos and don'ts of blogging at Google after posting and then temporarily pulling from the Web some mild criticisms of his new employer.
Called Ninetyninezeros (a reference to the mathematical term known as a "googol"), the blog offers a surprisingly candid insider's look at one of the world's most closely watched and tight-lipped tech companies. In one post, for example, Jen makes a detailed comparison of pay and benefits packages at Google and his former employer Microsoft, concluding that Google falls short.
Jen declined to comment for this story. But on Wednesday, an edited version of his blog reappeared on the site, with a new entry explaining the on-again, off-again commentary. Gone was the first day's post explaining his reasons for creating the blog, as well as a description of an employee orientation event that vaguely touched on discussions of Google's booming business. (A copy of the original posts can be found here.)
"I goofed and put some stuff on my blog that's not supposed to be there," he wrote. "I'm learning that Google is understandably careful about disclosing sensitive information, even vague financial-related things. The quickest way for me to fix the situation at the time was to take it all down. Now I'm back up."
Jen denied he made the change under duress, insisting that Google "was pretty cool about all this."
Employee blogging is on the rise, sparking increasing clashes between workers and management over the line between appropriate and inappropriate commentary. In one recent dispute, a Delta Air Lines flight attendant lost her job because of a blog, after posting photos of herself in uniform on the Net.
At the same time, blogs have been embraced by some top corporate executives as a powerful communication tool. Sun Microsystems President Jonathan Schwartz has made plenty of media hay with his blog, chastising partners and rivals over their business doings. Dot-com billionaire Mark Cuban, meanwhile, now goes straight to his blog with his musings about everything from digital entertainment to basketball.
The employee blog issue is doubly sensitive for Google, which became a prominent booster of blogging through its acquisition of Web logging pioneer Pyra Labs in February 2003. The company also has made a point of putting ethics before profits in its business operations, suggesting it holds itself to a higher standard of care than the
I read the old blog listed in the story and one thing occured to me. Didn't this guy ask about pay and benefits before joining the company? Sounds like he was blinded by the idea of working for Google that he completely forgot to use his brain.
Dear Diary, today, I dis'd my new employer, and thus so, on their dollar. And I left a miserable, suicidal position at micro$oft for what? Sub-par benefits? I mean, on-site dentist? on-site car warsh and lube? Please. Spare me bloogle. Perhaps his next blog will be details of how the unemployment line works?
I read the old blog listed in the story and one thing occured to me. Didn't this guy ask about pay and benefits before joining the company? Sounds like he was blinded by the idea of working for Google that he completely forgot to use his brain.
Dear Diary, today, I dis'd my new employer, and thus so, on their dollar. And I left a miserable, suicidal position at micro$oft for what? Sub-par benefits? I mean, on-site dentist? on-site car warsh and lube? Please. Spare me bloogle. Perhaps his next blog will be details of how the unemployment line works?
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Please. Spare me bloogle. Perhaps his next blog will be details of how the unemployment line works?
<a class="jive-link-external" href="http://russ.johnsonville.net" target="_newWindow">http://russ.johnsonville.net</a>
Please. Spare me bloogle. Perhaps his next blog will be details of how the unemployment line works?