My wife, newly hired, was asked to un-blur her camera during a routine meeting to confirm her I9 information. This seems like a violation to me?

shalafi@lemmy.world to Asklemmy@lemmy.ml – 370 points –

She had interviewed and met both remotely and in person, this guy was merely an HR drone confirming her documentation. I was a little bent when she told me he had asked her to remove her blur filter "to have a look at her working environment, make sure it's not cluttered" (something along those lines). No one else at this company requested such. Was he way out of line?

I should note, this is my PC in our living room and not where she will be working from. And this guy wants a look around our home?! Told my wife to bring this up once she's settled in, ask HR if this is policy. She started today!

She thinks it's a racism thing. I'm not so sure, but I don't have any other explanation.

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I've been remote the past 5 years as well. I've never heard of anyone, anywhere, for any reason being asked to un-blur video. Customers, vendors, coworkers, everyone does it. In fact, I consider it more professional, and certainly less distracting to do so unless you background is 100% work dedicated. Hence my post.

okay but consider that you don't have as much surveilance of your employees, and without that, how are you supposed to discipline them?

Just checking, youre being sarcastic right?

I was riffing on the original and translated titles of foucault's most well known work. whether it was sarcasm or not; 🤷‍♀️

I agree! I brought this up with my team and they all laughed at it, and brought up too that "Wouldn't it look more professional having it on?"

Even in a 100% work dedicated office, there is no background that looks as professional and uncluttered as a blurred one.

I only unblur if I'm showing off my bookshelf or video game posters

I only leave my stuff unblurred cuz my cats like to be on cam.

My cat will get in front of me on camera, so blurring wouldn't even do anything