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Kerth
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quote:
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Unless they are vengeful recovering ex-fanfic writers or something.
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Hee! That gave me a chuckle. I was one of those for a while (well, not vengeful, but the other part was true). I fell off the wagon and landed here.
You and me both. My gosh, I was sober for FIVE years and then I bought the DVD box sets and it just spiralled from there.

Lovin' my insobriety though, I must admit. But, of course, I'll only admit that *here*. Which just makes me love the rest of you all the more. sloppy


Lois: You know, I have a funny feeling that you didn't tell me your biggest secret.

Clark: Well, just to put your little mind at ease, Lois, you're right.
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So, Sue, from your last post, does that mean you used to write fanfic before you recently returned?
~~~

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Well, I know someone in my other fandom, a fanfic writer, who had to delete her LJ, her account on the fanfic archive and other evidence of her presence on the internet because she's job-hunting and all this stuff turned up in a search on her and did her damage.
I think this is awful, too. I bet if this happened in the States, that the applicant could say discrimination had occurred. After all, if the person had published a book - any kind, fiction including naughty fiction, no big deal would have been made out of it. They probably would have thought it was great. The only thing that should have affected her is if she had written truly distasteful fiction (nasty S&M or kiddy porn, etc.). Just because the people hiring didn't like her pasttime doesn't mean they should hold it against her. It's hard to say what that person doing the hiring did as a pasttime. Maybe, someday, if that person's pasttime gets used against them, they will know how stupid they were.

It does give me pause to think that since I'm currently in a job search that I should make sure they know I never lived in the city where that other RN lives.
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Long before the arrival of the net or Google I used to work for an employer who would make the most prejudiced assumptions about people based on the facts in their resume, which were just unbelievable and completely without logic.
Yes, people can be stupid. I list missionary work on my resume, because I learned so much (including another language), and I think it's important part of my background. You'd be surprised how many people have actually asked me what church I did this with (against the law in the States). I have gone both ways - I've refused to answer, and I've given the answer. It all depends on how they ask it.
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And, of course, we all know that women of a certain age can be rejected out of hand because the employer assumes that they will be having kids in the next few years,
Yes, and a lot of women are rejected because they are older, too. I see myself facing that now, and I'm... well, I'm not that old.
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Could someone explain to me why fanfic writing would hurt someones chance to get a job, more the say bonsai gardening? Surely people allowed to have hobbies?
You'd think, wouldn't you? I've had a couple of people's facial expressions totally change when I tell them I'm an artsy type person - as in arts and crafts and music, etc...
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It's the people who don't know me very well (or those who just think they know me) who might make an unfair snap judgment about me.
Exactly. And you're not obsessed, Sue.... Just because your son was out of underwear and socks, doesn't mean you are obsessed. (I'm teasing. If you were really obsessed, you would have quit your job and done nothing more than write fanfic and let your son starve. OH, my god! I've got to find a job.... Really, this hasn't kept me from finding a job... really dizzy )
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All the more reason to use a pen name in your internet life.
Exactly.
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What does LJ mean?
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But if you do the whole thing - writing, reading, reviewing, beta-reading for others, participation in discussions, chats, LJ, etc., you're spending huge amounts of time on it. If an employer knew how much time it took (and some probably have an idea) they might well be suspicious that some of that time might be coming out of the work day.
I must not have worked for the most trusting employers. Believe it or not there are lots of jobs out there where nurses don't have to work in a hospital or doctor's office, etc. I've worked for insurance companies, etc, where I've sat in an office cubicle all day long. Nearly every place I've worked in an office the employer monitored the sites everyone visited. Some didn't even allow internet access - only intranet access. One place I worked had internet access, but I wasn't even allowed to check my Yahoo mail while I was at work. Yahoo mail was blocked. One place I worked, a coworker and I looked at a genealogy site for about two minutes. Two minutes - that's it. It took me a 1/2 hour to explain that I was just getting on long enough to mostly give her the address. Of course, they were mostly upset because they had found out she was gaming (which I didn't know), but then I had to explain my brief access because I was her supervisor. Arggghhhh.....
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But some people can write a novel in practically no time
Yeah, and the people that write them that fast produce 'pulp fiction' (not the movie). The stuff is out of order, lots of stuff is misspelled, the grammar is horrible, and my biggest pet peeve - some people can't be bothered to use capitals when capital letters should be used - or better yet, when they can't be bothered to use any punctuaion. No wonder fanfic gets a bad rap. Would that everyone wrote as well as Wendy.
~~

Interesting discussion.


~~Even heroes have the right to dream.~~
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Sorry! LJ is LiveJournal. Some fandoms are all but headquartered over there these days, though this one seems not to have moved quite as drastically in that direction.

Caroline

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OK. I concede that is a reasonable assumption, if you look at say Wendy’s portfolio. But some people can write a novel in practically no time and I don’t believe that someone who never tried serious writing can accurately judge the time, and some fanfic novels take years to produce so on a weekly basis, it doesn’t necessarily have to be that time consuming.
And most people have some leisure activity that consume great parts of their free time, like say golfing.
I don't think employers take the time to think any of this through to this degree - in either a positive or negative direction.

Yvonne makes a good point in relation to this. How many times on the news have you seen a positive story linked to people using the internet? Mostly, it's about the weirdos. Be they fanatical fans of something, cheating students, or child molesters.

And how many times have you seen a documentary or news item (convention coverage, for example, on local TV) about fans that showed them in a positive light? They always focus on the creeps and weird fish - the ones that the rest of us are cringing at. laugh

So it's probably not surprising that most people who don't use the net socially or regularly see it as a negative thing to be involved in and are suspicious of those who do.

Employers with a pool of potential employees aren't going to take the time to deeply explore the reasons why one is spending all their time on the net as a hobby when they have others who don't and are probably - in their eyes at least - a safer bet, more responsible, mature and not so flakey. <g>

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If an employer knew how much time it took (and some probably have an idea) they might well be suspicious that some of that time might be coming out of the work day.
This, too, makes a good point. Aside from all of the above, I think what most employers associate the net with is all those stories they've seen on the news about employees getting fired for spending their working day sending risque joke emails to one another or browsing porn sites. Again, they're not going to spend time finding out differently if they're not interested in the first place and there are other potential employees to hire who don't use the net at all. Like most of us they'll take the path of least resistence and take the easiest route to hiring.

LabRat smile



Athos: If you'd told us what you were doing, we might have been able to plan this properly.
Aramis: Yes, sorry.
Athos: No, no, by all means, let's keep things suicidal.


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I think this is awful, too. I bet if this happened in the States, that the applicant could say discrimination had occurred.
It did happen in the US. And the person concerned is having to stay away from all leisure-based internet activity until her job-hunt is over and she's secure in her job.


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Merriwether
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Why on earth doesn't she simply use a secret identity?

Er . . . I mean a pen name. wink


Do you know the most surprising thing about divorce? It doesn't actually kill you, like a bullet to the heart or a head-on car wreck. It should. When someone you've promised to cherish till death do you part says, "I never loved you," it should kill you instantly.

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I don't know enough about the situation to know how it all came to light. I do know that her LJ username was nothing like her real name (which I also know thanks to email correspondence). Somehow, and I have no idea how, her LJ was linked to her real identity - it's possible that she uses the same nick in different places, as I do - I suppose it wouldn't be difficult at all to put together that Wendymr is the person whose full name is on the Fanfic Archive and who is also applying for X positions, and then is also the person active on Live Journal in other respects. Though, yes, it would require a fair bit of searching. So I can only see it as having happened at a very late stage in a process - perhaps when she was on the point of being offered a job.

As I said, I don't know the details. But, as a general point, employment counsellors and employment agencies in North America are now warning people that online activity may be examined and could harm them in getting a job. Which I think is totally ridiculous in the case of 99% of those active online, but there you go. :rolleyes:


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Sorry I was too late to reply, Rivka. Thanks.

I'm loving the discussion over here!

See ya,
AnnaBtG.


What we've got here is failure to communicate...
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Originally posted by Wendymr:
Though, yes, it would require a fair bit of searching.
It really wouldn't. As I explained to Anna, all it takes is ONE LINK connecting her LJ to a site that shows her real name (or one that links to one that links to one, under the right circumstances).

I have a LJ. But I am exceedingly careful to not link it to ANY site remotely connected to any forums I post on. Let alone anywhere with my real name. I also friendslock almost everything (not that I post there all that often!) I never use my real name there (even first), and if a friend does in a comment, I ask them to edit.

This is not paranoia. This is the only way to not have search engines (especially but not exclusively Goggle) make the connection between my LJ and my other web presences.

And it's not foolproof. Someone could figure out who I am based on some of my LJ friends, who do link to fora we post on. Hence the locked posts.


Do you know the most surprising thing about divorce? It doesn't actually kill you, like a bullet to the heart or a head-on car wreck. It should. When someone you've promised to cherish till death do you part says, "I never loved you," it should kill you instantly.

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Yes I worry. I don't want to get teased or someone decide to pretend they are me. I know I've said my real name though...

I looked up my e-mail address and only found it twice when I used google. My e-mail got grabbed from one site where I was looking up my family at a town board. I just looked up my e-mail address and it is at some site I don't understand the language or what's going on! I know my address has been grabbed before multiple times, but to see it in a thread at some board is kinda weird.

Yeah, I know I say that and I use a picture of myself in my avatar. A few years old and I'm twisting my face...but my brother would notice and tease me until the day I die. If he did I guess I could just egg his car continually. angel-devil


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Originally posted by SuperRoo:
I just looked up my e-mail address and it is at some site I don't understand the language or what's going on! I know my address has been grabbed before multiple times, but to see it in a thread at some board is kinda weird.
That site set off all kinds of warning bells for me. So I asked a friend of mine who speaks German (the site is actually in Flemish/Dutch, but the two are similar) to confirm that it was what I think it is. She agrees that it looks like a spammer/phisher website. (If Saskia is around the forum these days, she could give a more exact translation of what exactly is on the site.)

Who knew they had forums? Although I suppose it makes sense.

Now, your email address is just on a list, not specifically targeted. So it's not that big a deal -- I imagine every person on this board gets tons of spam.

But yeah, that site gives me the willies.


Do you know the most surprising thing about divorce? It doesn't actually kill you, like a bullet to the heart or a head-on car wreck. It should. When someone you've promised to cherish till death do you part says, "I never loved you," it should kill you instantly.

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But, as a general point, employment counsellors and employment agencies in North America are now warning people that online activity may be examined and could harm them in getting a job. Which I think is totally ridiculous in the case of 99% of those active online, but there you go.
Good grief! People need to join the twentieth century - especially since we are now in the twenty-first century.


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I'm not worried about it. My married name is so common, it generated 48,500 hits on Google. And forget my maiden name. It's Johnson. The second most common last name in the US, last I heard. My online nick is extremely common, since it's also a real name (not mine. A variation is reserved for my somedayinthefuture daughter, if I ever have one). A few of my email addresses don't turn up much. Though I just googled my work address, and wonder what I was on about on a newsgroup...

Googling is the least of my problems. Considering I have my own domain whose email address I use, I have a personal website on there. Which links to my LJ, and links to here... hmm, wonder if I have every single work entry locked. sad And don't forget the picture gallery I have, with family pictures... heh


"You need me. You wouldn't be much of a hero without a villain. And you do love being the hero, don't you. The cheering children, the swooning women, you love it so much, it's made you my most reliable accomplice." -- Lex Luthor to Superman, Question Authority, Justice League Unlimited
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I list missionary work on my resume, because I learned so much (including another language), and I think it's important part of my background. You'd be surprised how many people have actually asked me what church I did this with (against the law in the States).
My husband's been looking for work lately, and the advice he got was, anything you've done for a church should be written down on your resume as "non-profit organization." If they ask you about it in an interview, you can choose how much to reveal, but you won't get it tossed in the trash immediately just because you're a religious nut wink

I never used to worry about being Googled. I've used my real name in lots of places. When I started looking for work, it did concern me a bit -- but then I figured, I haven't done anything to be ashamed of, and besides, my name's all over everything so it's too late to try to cover it up now laugh

Actually, on my resume, under volunteer, I put organizing the Kerth awards -- which, if you didn't know, are a peer-based award system for an online amateur author's group. wink It was fun thinking up all the wording.

PJ


"You told me you weren't like other men," she said, shaking her head at him when the storm of laughter had passed.
He grinned at her - a goofy, Clark Kent kind of a grin. "I have a gift for understatement."
"You can say that again," she told him.
"I have a...."
"Oh, shut up."

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Volunteer work is important, whatever type it is. Ever been involved in fundraising? Buying equipment for your kids' school, or your church's social club? Or been on the Archive/MBs fundraising committee? How much was raised? That's all very relevant, and employers are interested.


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I worry about this. As a teenager I was thrilled to death to have my name on the internet. I knew it was me, because I'm the only person with my full name in the entire world--no joke.

Then I got into a profession that considers this sort of writing to be, if not a complete crime against humanity, definitely not a bonus for the career. I just hope nobody googles me until my professional activities outweigh my fanfiction. I removed my name from several prominent places (like the Archive). No one can actually access my stories anymore, but it's still coming up when other fanfic writers referred to me in their stories OR in sites that are no longer maintained but still exist. Still working on that.

On the plus side, I recently discovered that I have a second cousin who shares my same first and last name (with a different middle name). I am now planning to blame every citation of me that I'm not thrilled about on her. I feel it's somewhat evil, but she's a horse trainer so I doubt the horses care if she wrote fanfic in the past!

This puts a whole new spin on the idea of anxiety of authorship.


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Until this thread I'd never been interested in Googling names. But you got me curious. <G> So I Google'd LabRat. My, the things I've done in my life! goofy

Sadly, refining the search to Doc Klein's Labrat only brought up several Fanfic Archive references. wink

Personally, I just have this thing about people knowing too much about me that they don't need to know. Read government, there. So I just like to use a nick whenever I can, just on basic principle.

LabRat smile



Athos: If you'd told us what you were doing, we might have been able to plan this properly.
Aramis: Yes, sorry.
Athos: No, no, by all means, let's keep things suicidal.


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So I Google'd LabRat. My, the things I've done in my life!
Some of those things wouldn't involve running around on a little wheel, would they laugh

ML wave


She was in such a good mood she let all the pedestrians in the crosswalk get to safety before taking off again.
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Hush! /me kicks the wheel under the straw and whistles innocently.

LabRat smile (trying to kick the habit...)



Athos: If you'd told us what you were doing, we might have been able to plan this properly.
Aramis: Yes, sorry.
Athos: No, no, by all means, let's keep things suicidal.


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Well, actually I'm not really concerned about what might be found about me in the net... I do this from time to time but I hardly find anything that could be of any harm... at most, it'd be embarassing wink

S, googling my real name, my homepage is the first thing.
Then there are some stupid "i'd like to find some guys who I went to school with" pages... these are actually boards where I could delete my traces wink
It goes on with university stuff, several boards I use (university, autism, the Sims, loosing weight (yikes...speaking of embarassment...)) ... err... a curriculum vitae of me confused

Well... I'm only a student yet, so the worst that could happen, were tutors googling me of who I wish to have better things to do with their time wink laugh

Bye,

Jana


"Maybe I know what it's like, trying to find fulfillment in the wrong person. Trying to fit into the mold others expect of you."

"Looking for love" by DC Lady
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