Users ditch Glassdoor, stunned by site adding real names without consent

purrtastic@lemmy.nz to Technology@lemmy.world – 1332 points –
Users ditch Glassdoor, stunned by site adding real names without consent
arstechnica.com
229

That's a fantastically efficient way to destroy their business. There's no way to get honest reviews of employers from employees who know their identities will be exposed whether they consent or not. Doesn't even matter if the review is after leaving that job, future employers can go nosing too.

Absolute techbro-brane gold.

This is what happens right before the major money holders abandon ship. There’s no way they don’t know this is business-suicide. I bet they got a big payday from some companies that paid Glassdoor to shoot itself in the face!

I'm normally not a conspiracy dude, but this just fucking SCREAMS sabotage to me.

This screams liability and damages avoidance to me.

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Good way to get yourself blackballed from the industry if you give a bad complaint from previous employer.

A former employer actually did send lawyers after me for a bad Glassdoor review. The dumb thing is that it wasn't even my review.

This is beyond stupid.

Welcome to the point of the change. Kill off the liabilty & associated damages.

Doesnt matter if the facts are true. In fact it matters more if they are!

I expect their logic is their review "curation" racket is a sideshow and the real money is selling information to agencies and sales companies.

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I just went in and manually edited my display name to my previous asshole of a boss. Two can play this game. If they want to get rid of anonymous content, then let them deal with poisoned content.

I put a review up for my previous employer a while back. My whole profile uses fake data. Even in my review, since it would be very obvious who I was, I was light on details and generalized as much as I could and used false dates for when I was hired/left.

This screams liability protection, your name change is both logged so they can transfer liability to you.

Reputation slander and damages can get astronomical

No one can afford a lawsuit that hacky.

Uh, reminder that these giant corporations don't shop for lawyers like you or I would have to, they're already on retainer. It would literally cost them nothing they're not already paying to sue someone (except their reputation, which they've already thrown away).

Right, but you're not talking about Glass Door. You're talking about another cooperation reacting to information on Glass Door. Most companies in the US are small businesses without the resources to go after people on websites in general, and if you're obfuscated your identity before posting on glassdoor, then you just double to tripled the price of the lawsuit in lawyer time filing motions to uncover your identity.

You're talking about another cooperation reacting to information on Glass Door.

by wanting to take legal action. They want to transfer liability from Glass Door to the individual. So yes, my point stands...

Exactly how do Glassdoor expect people to give earnest reviews of their employers (which is literally the core of their business) if those people can't trust Glassdoor to not to throw them under the bus when they give honest reviews of malicious employers?

Talk about sabotaging your own business model - idiots.

Exactly how do Glassdoor expect people to give earnest reviews of their employers

They don't. The enshitification has begun and they only care about short-term profits now that they've built up a user base.

earnest reviews of their employers (which is literally the core of their business

I don't understand the need for a site like this. I just assume that my employer is going to suck in standard corporate suck fashion.

There are levels to that suck though

And sometimes it's not just corporate suck. I've literally had the CIO of a construction contractor berate me on the phone before I had started. Needless to say I didn't take their offer

Name and shame. And publish your real name while you're at it.

Haha. I really want to do the first part, but relatively local to my region. I'd rather not give that out right now :\

Same. Got screamed at before the interview. don't know why I even bothered going, maybe just curious how fucked up the place would be.

Left them a bad Google maps review which was kinda fun since they had zero reviews before I left one. They left a screaming reply to it hahah

What happened that they screamed at you even before an interview?

Was a long time ago but I remember it was something small like I had used my old snail mail address on my resume vs my cover-letter.

But hey they bought me lunch so it wasn't a total lost and I got to see all the people running the place act like total assholes to each other. So dinner and a show.

There's the normal suck, then there's "I (been there 12 years) got passed up for promotion to replace my boss who retired because the owner's nephew who worked with us for a few years (sucked and "volentarely" left 6 years ago) decided their cyptoscheme wasn't working out and needed a job, and that was the highest one paying one avalible."

Or the "Sally got verably harassed dailiy and they did nothing because the harrasser has been there 30 years. 'He's just an old man in his early 50s, older gentlemen call ladies nicknames like sweetcakes, honey, or cutie all the time. They also like to rub peoples shoulders to show affec to help relive the tension and promote a healthier work environment' "

Ok, but if your expectations are permanent nerfed you're gonna be a much easier mark... Plus tacit acceptance of a shitty status quo is pretty self-defeating.

Ok, but if your expectations are permanent nerfed you’re gonna be a much easier mark… Plus tacit acceptance of a shitty status quo is pretty self-defeating.

Thank you for saying this.

I don't get how so many people are so willing to just pull down their pants and bend over, instead of pushing back.

I've had a couple of good jobs where I was treated well and compensated well all around. Companies like that would be glad to have reviews from happy employees visible to the public on a trustworthy review site.

Some are much more capable of disguising it during the interview process.

In the tech industry around the pandemic there was the great resignation and companies were tripping over themselves to employ as many people as possible. It was great then because you had so many options and they were all seemingly similar job descriptions.

Now the site is shitty and getting a job is terrible. Woo capitalism!

Frankly I never trusted Glassdoor. I assume most reviews are made by the companies HR department to lie about how great it is. I just need to look at the reviews of the companies I've worked for to see that it's 99% bullshit.

Don't trust employers. They lie to you and underpay you.

There was one place a friend worked where all the glassdoor reviews said there were "growing pains". I don't think that many normal people who have intact souls would describe startup dysfunction as "growing pains."

It has its uses. And one bad employer can really mess you up for a while. It takes a lot of effort to have a low score on that site.

Because it's worth knowing beforehand what a company is really like behind closed doors.

Some companies are great, some suck in standard corporate fashion, but there are some out there that are exceptional in sucking...

I'll use myself an example... the last company I worked for, our team was constantly given deadlines that were impossible to meet within work hours. The company basically refused to pay for what was essentially mandatory overtime required to catch up - wage theft by a different name.

Fortunately my role allowed me to push back, but most of peers didn't - we were all straight out of university, some needed the money/job, but most just didn't know how to fight in the corporate environment.

Not to mention that a few folks who did try to complain against the company conveniently found themselves fired for some miscellaneous breaches of contract. From what I heard, one was even fired based on their reaction to being told they were being dismissed - quite literally entrapment.

If you're wondering why we didn't sue or anything like that, again we were all straight out of uni, we barely knew what our working rights were...

Which is why Glassdoor was important - it was how most of these folks got word out about the company and tried to warn other potential candidates of what they were walking into.

The company knew about it too because they posted multiple fake reviews to try to drown out the real ones. I know for a fact that if they were able to find out who posted these, they would have retaliated, likely in the form of litigation.

Glassdoor "may update your Profile with information we obtain from third parties"

Imagine Reddit does this next lmao one day you open up and all your real life social media are linked to your u/Lick_My_Fuckhole profile, your coworkers see you as "people you may know" on their profiles. Neat

Didn't Google+ do that?

It's been so long since that debacle I honestly don't remember.

YouTube did it when Google bought them and changed everyone’s unique username to their Google account (real) name

wtf that's a terrible decision lol

Facebook did it as well, maybe a couple years after opening up to the non university crowd. Neither FB at the time or G+ years later gave any thought that their no pseudonym policies put someone's safety at risk.

Google+ was a Facebook-like social media. It was only ever supposed to be real names, so no issue.

I mainly use reddit now for porn. Maybe a good way to get into a freak fetish ring...

The only fetish subreddit I followed was banned. There was not even any nudity.

Fuck Reddit.

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This is one of the most obvious potential cases of purposeful sabatoge. They were probably bribed by other big businesses to destroy their reputation so people would stop using the site.

There's nothing businesses hate more than their workers having negotiating power, and wage transparency gives them more power than they had before. There's a reason why it's considered "rude" in the US to discuss wages with co-workers; I always make a point to discuss my wage with all of my co-workers, since it's illegal for businesses to prevent that discussion.

In most other countries, it's the norm to openly discuss your wages; unions are also more common in other countries. It's just standard toxic workplace cultures trying to prevent people from getting paid what they're worth, or god forbid, forming a union.

In what countries is it custom to openly discuss salary? In Germany and most if not all countries I’ve been to professionally it is not the norm. This is of course bad for transparency/employees and good for employers.

Germany has a principle of equal treatment. The only way to ensure this is respected is to discuss wages. There is a legal precedent that makes it completely unambiguous that discussing wages is protected. It may be uncomfortable, but that's just social pressure, encouraged by companies.

https://www.hensche.de/Rechtsanwalt_Arbeitsrecht_Urteile_AGB_LAG_Mecklenburg-Vorpommern_2Sa237-09.html

Not denying that it’s legal and beneficial to discuss that. It’s unfortunately not common (yet?).

Where I live we don't really discuss salaries and I think that mostly comes down to society being tricked into believing it's a bad thing. However our national statistics agency has made salary statistics public, which means anyone easily check their salary range and see if they're being underpaid. I actually prefer that to discussing with co-workers because you end up getting a much better picture of your industry.

In my country I’m only aware of statistics published by a newspaper (source may be statista, some agency or a job portal). I find the values weird however as I earn way above the stated value for my general description. I’m in a bit of a niche however so that might work to my benefit. The statistics still feel like ‘expectation management’ to me though.

All of scandinavia. There are public registers where you can look up the salary of everyone for norway, sweden and finland. When these registers were introduced, the salaries were normalized across the whole population

In Denmark, I'm part of a union which publishes salary stats for every possible job title, management responsibility, education, in a fairly convoluted matrix. Still, this allows me to easily negotiate with companies and see how well they pay. There might be something organised by the government, but I've never had a need for it.

I like the idea of a register a lot.

Do you also talk about it though? I was in Denmark on business for a couple of weeks and I don’t recall there being a discussion about it.

In China, "How much do you make?" Is right up there with "What's your name?".

Pretty disarming for unsuspecting foreigners.

Pretty disarming for unsuspecting foreigners.

That would indeed be a WTF moment for me.

Do you know when it became illegal to ban salary discussions in the US? All the companies I have worked for recently have mentioned it not being allowed at some point.

You cannot prevent your employees from discussing wages. It is literally illegal to do so, and you cannot reprimand people for doing so.

Under the National Labor Relations Act (NLRA or the Act), employees have the right to communicate with their coworkers about their wages, as well as with labor organizations, worker centers, the media, and the public. Wages are a vital term and condition of employment, and discussions of wages are often preliminary to organizing or other actions for mutual aid or protection.

If you are an employee covered by the Act, you may discuss wages in face-to-face conversations, over the phone, and in written messages. Policies that specifically prohibit the discussion of wages are unlawful as are policies that chill employees from discussing their wages.

You may have discussions about wages when not at work, when you are on break, and even during work if employees are permitted to have other non-work conversations. You have these rights whether or not you are represented by a union.

https://www.nlrb.gov/about-nlrb/rights-we-protect/your-rights/your-rights-to-discuss-wages

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It's not illegal. It's frown upon both socially and at the work culture. It makes people uncomfortable.

Doesn't mean you shouldn't. Ripping farts is frowned upon/makes people uncomfortable too.

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From the article that they acquired a professional social networking app so their intention is clearly to be like LinkedIn - real names, links, career history, "social". They want to monetize that information to sell to recruiters and salesmen.

So basically they're nakedly greedy and they continue to suck. I thought LinkedIn was awful but Glassdoor is a whole new level of awful.

Man, people love to make up conspiracy theories.

The article explains the motivation, which is also bad and plausible. There's no need to pull stuff out of your ass to explain it too.

While I see what you are seeing, I think people will just move to the next startup.

Also by Occam’s razor, don’t explain with malice what you can explain with stupidity

Fair point, but I'm wondering which part you were applying Occam's razor to - what Glassdoor did is clearly malicious!

To the part that they were bribed.

I think they are simply in the pipe dream that they will become the new LinkedIn

That would be Hanlons razor. I have no idea whether it applies here.

There is also the growing difficulty of disseminating real information from false information, but that should have been more the reviewed company's problem than Glassdoor.

Or

Think about it for more than 1 second.

They’ve been sued for liable.

Or

They’re being shit and creating a new revenue stream because constant growth and bonuses

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It seems as though nobody in this thread actually read the article. They are not revealing user names on the site. The objection here is having the real name as part of your private profile data, in case of a future data breach. It’s a real concern, but orders of magnitude less serious than what everybody is assuming.

Shame on Ars for the misleading clickbait headline.

Agree that it's misleading, but to add there is another significant concern given how glassdoor is already "pay to win" from the companies perspective: they could just offer identifying the users as a paid service.

It would be digging their own grave if that starts happening, but that doesn't seem to be stopping many companies..

They are not revealing user names on the site.

You mean, "They are not currently revealing user names on the site." This may easily be the first temperature increment in a frog-boiling process.

(Cynical? Yes, but the world keeps reinforcing that attitude.)

Agreed, but the article title implies that they are in fact currently revealing names, which is just not the case.

I'm more concerned that the company decided it was OK to meld the "From:" line of her email (asking for support) into her profile. If they think that's an appropriate way to handle PII, I don't trust them.

What they’re actually doing is super shady, and reason enough to cause concern without exaggerating.

It's not that, its the risk they could get subpoenaed and then they have to turn over the CSVs that could identify users inadvertently.

Financial institutions who are currently having data breaches. This is the worst time to couple PII data So tightly.

The moment Glassdoor gets hacked, it'll be absolute shit show for whistleblowers.

This doesn't really make it any better though, IMO

You really don't think "we store your username and haven't revealed it" is any better than "we store your real name and did reveal it"?

For a supposedly anonymous site that's going to be a target from both hackers and companies looking to reveal that data, I'd say it's not really any better, just delayed. All it takes is someone finding a SQL injection vulnerability on the site to scrape the user database, or a court to rule that they have to turn that data over to a company looking to go after an employee, or even just someone with the right access at the company clicking the wrong link

If you want to be anonymous, the first step is to not give people your name or other PII

Highly recommend at least trying to poison your data before deactivating/deleting; they have some legalese that gives them a workaround to keep things to an extent

Note: When you close your account, you will no longer have full access to salaries, reviews, or interviews. Any content you have shared will be removed from the display on the site, but we reserve the right to keep any information in a closed account in our archives that we deem necessary to comply with our legal and regulatory obligations, resolve disputes, and enforce our agreements. For more information, review our Privacy & Cookie Policy.

You also need to be careful when deleting your account - when you do, they'll send you a "there was an issue with your request" email that tries to get you to register again by prompting you to "log in" to fix it. The log in is creating a password for a new account.

True, but keep in mind they likely have backups of everything. If you do this all at once it will probably be noticed and they might just roll it all back when you are gone. Case in point, reddit. If you do this slowly maybe it will stay, not sure.

Even if they know, burnt out software engineers with other priorities are probably not recovering old data

Unless some exec has a meltdown and demands them to revert the site

That's usually a monumental undertaking for sites that are majority database-driven like Glassdoor. Think multiple regional databases.

I doubt they delete anything. Just add a flag to the datastore so users don't see it, but they can still sell it or train AI on it or whatever.

The data is never getting deleted in the first place, "delete" just needs to set a flag for non-visibility. The language used in their disclaimer leads me to believe exactly that is what is happening.

I've never seen much reason to use a real name on Glassdoor. They demand visitors sign up to see information, and every logon it demands more details. So I am glad I used a throwaway account and I expect many others did too, or filled it in with junk. I hope their database is poisoned with garbage. I'm sure they will continue to turn the screws - using a mobile device? You MUST use our app etc. I hope people realise that LinkedIn already sucks and here is something even worse moving into the same space.

I wanted to leave a review a while back but when they asked for my name I figured with so many data breaches it was going to get revealed at some point, it's ridiculous they did it on purpose tho

I did the same thing twice.

Two different employers that really deserve to be absolutely thrashed but as soon as I got to the point where it was asking me my true identity I realized there was no hope it wouldn't come back to bite me in the long run.

I understand why in their business model they want to be able to verify employment. I'd even say it's reasonable. But the Privacy implications of it are just too tremendous and they I've never been practically or systemically trustworthy.

And knowing this about them means they aren't a reliable place to be warned off of a bad employer either. The primary purpose of their site is completely undermined by this bad policy.

Thanks, deleted my account

Deleted my account and then made up a fictional worker with AI who works at Glassdoor in their Albuquerque location making $5mil/year as an intern and bitching about how the pay isn't great.

Everyone thinking this was a business blunder... People got paid a lot of money to kill this site. It served in its own small way, to give workers a bit of power in relation to employers and that was unacceptable.

Yeah, this reeks of generic neoliberal sabotage to me. They do the same thing with unions and political parties. If anything is a potential threat to profits, it's infiltrated and undermined.

There's simply no way that a team focused on employee rights does something like this. Everybody working there would definitely be aware that companies routinely try to identify and punish people for their posts. That alone would end any non-malicious plans for using real names.

Aaand there goes another service again, which I've never used and now will probably never even think about using.

What possible reason could Glassdoor have invented to convince themselves this is a good idea?

This kind of thing is what has always kept me from using Blind as well.

A site used to talk shit about your current employor that has a registration process that requires you to hand out your work email, and they pinky promise not to ever provide that to anyone?

No thanks, even if they would never do it on purpose, they are one good breach away from it getting out anyway.

Iirc the way that blind works is by verifying you work at a specific company but then that email address cannot be used again.

It's not associated with your specific account.

Someone who worked at blind explained that but there's no way to know this for sure.

PSA to use fake info for just about every site you ever sign up for. Never offer PII unless you absolutely have to like with the bank or IRS.

I have about 5 or 6 aliases, full blown characters that live in my head, each with different names, addresses and backstories that I use. Even they lie about their personal circumstances sometimes. For example, on LinkedIn, John Longson works at Longson and Longson consulting, but he's the only employee, and he actually just works at a thrift store with a side hustle of selling second hand clothes on etsy under an alias.

If I need to fudge info, I tend to put it into a password database's "notes" field for easier note-keeping, FWIW.

Not a full-on identity, but bits of info like stated name, address, etc.

Lol wtf is the point of linkedin specifically if you don't join with your real info?

You just browsing people's profiles? Friend requesting your other aliases?

Art Vandelay, Vandelay Industries, we import/export.

I heard he was thinking about quitting exporting to focus on the importing.

Mine are usually just remixes of my ancestors, for example ill just combine two random ancestors names and where one of them was from. Why yes random website I am Shadrak McNulty born in Littlerock Arkansas.

LinkedIn is one of the few sites where I use my real name. It is for connecting with past and future coworkers, so they get my real identity.

Oh I have a real linkedin, but I have several fake ones for lurking as well.

Why not present ones? And how do you know who you'll work with in the future?

Right, I forgot that LinkedIn calls contacts "connection", doesn't it? I meant it in the sense of messaging them.

I have it for talking to past coworkers (in case I need a reference or want to discuss equity or something) and for talking to recruiters when I am looking for a job. My past two jobs I heard about via LinkedIn messages.

I guess that's one strategy but that's too much work for me. I just pay for unique email forwarding addresses to my main email and use fakenamegenerator.com for filling out fake PII. Also a password manager is key

Sound advice, but if this article is any indication, corporate web2 now anticipates garbage. The junk presumably gets backfilled with their best attempt at quality data where it can be found. It true, it invites potential contributors to think carefully about their opsec.

Glass door used to be interesting, but this site is total trash now. You can’t do anything without creating an account and filling out a bunch of shit. That site is basically a dark pattern hall of fame.

They probably really crippled the long term growth of that company by making stupid short term greedy decisions that killed the user experience and scared people away.

Its almost as if they got bought out by a company that didnt want workers to have an opinion

Glassdoor is little more than a shakedown service like Yelp or Tripadvisor. It looks superficially useful but the real purpose is to suck information out of users to monetize, and extort businesses for $$$ for review "curation".

Interesting.

I signed up for GD with a semi-throwaway email account - not an actual throwaway, but it’s not tied to my real identity, not used for anything but spammy sites where I didn’t want to give them my info. Every site got a made up name.
Wonder what name they’ll slap on the account when they try to farm “my” data from a broker.

I lie shamelessly to companies when signing up these days. They get fake DoBs, names, aliased emails, fake addresses, phones, the lot. Let them out that data on my profile without consent, hopefully they aren't going to expend resources to penetrate that veil.

They dont even have to pay to expend resources. People will buy that shit, sort through it, then sell it to turn a profit. The advertising industry is a cancer to the human race.

If you then keep a log of who you told what, it'll be easier to keep track of which companies distributed "your" info.

I use keepass, it's worked great for years. No way I could remember passwords anyway without it.

Butts McGee strikes again

Killroy WasHere

I guess that cinches it. If I ever want to sign up for an adult site, they’re going to know me as “Seymour Butts.”

One job.

🎶 I don't know why

It doesn't even matter

how hard you try

Keep that in mind,

glassdoor was designed

To help employees in due time

all I know

data is a valuable thing

Watch our users fly by as enshittification swings

Watch it pile out to our IPO

The clock ticks money away 🎶

I mean that site has always been pretty shady and likely has had paid review removals for years, but wow, that is honestly a next-level fuckup.

Are there any good alternatives to Glassdoor? The website and app were already hot UX garbage as it is so difficult to find salaries in other countries and figure out the currency without it bugging out frequently.

I’ve heard good things about levels.

Levels is great for the tech industry. (Possibly other industries as well, but that's the one I am familiar with)

Only tech, and only programmer-adjacent roles.

If you're the guy who serves food at a tech campus facility it does nothing for you

There is Blind (I think by Team Blind).

Blind is full of the shittiest coworkers you didn’t know you had, so take it with a grain of salt

I just went in and manually edited my display name to my previous asshole of a boss. Two can play this game. If they want to get rid of anonymous content, then let them deal with poisoned content.

Team Blind is decent, at least in the tech sector.

If i understand this right, glassdoor is for anonymous tips/rating of emploers/working conditions?

Would that work as a Lemmy community?

It had a lot of features, it could be its own thing on the Fediverse outside of Lemmy if enough people needed it.

An open - source, decentralized job board? Yeah, hopefully someone does that, I'm sure it would serve a great need.

Building an open-source decentralized job board would look really good on a resume…

The search and thread managment would be a nightmare, no? You'd need a thread for every company (larger ones needing multiple split by department or location).

There's probably a hundred business with in a mile of me. Even if you splinter communities by location, the search would be difficult.

By Lemmy standards I'm perversely unconcerned with my privacy. But I just updated all my glassdoor info to wildly incorrect stuff (name, location, industry, job title, etc) then deleted it. Even for me this is a bridge too far.

Operation Market Garden is still paying for its failure after all these years.

I didn’t input my employer, so they just pull my email domain and it says like “Project Manager at MyEmailDomain” in my profile now. What a load of horse shit.

i genuinely cannot believe that people use their real info on these sites. Actually fucking stupid.

According to the article, people generally don't use their real info on this site, but the site is making dubious inferences that allow them to pull the info from other sources to auto-populate the 'real' fields in their site.

That's even worse. I bet there are tons of false positives and people facing consequences at job for bad reviews Glassdoor thinks they wrote.

It is a bit surprising. I must have had at least 8 fake accounts there just to bash one of my ex-employers. Took a whole star off their rating.

I wonder what pushed them to start verifying ID?

damn, i love some good "business fraud"

Pretty sure it would just be lying since you know, no financial gain. Except it isn't even full lying since I did tell the truth about the company. I admit I might have gone a bit over the top when they announced that they bought another company and I tracked down every employee of that company to write them an email detailing exactly how they would be gutted with references to other companies that had been bought up and suffered the same fate by the same new parent company. Then of course found out they still had a fax number and sent them a fax. Had to make sure IT didn't try to hide it.

Maybe don't buy a small engineering/manufacturing company, outsource it all to China, and and all the while slash R&D + personal and you won't have people over a decade later still bashing you on Glassdoor.

im sure the business higher ups would have something to say about it, frankly i was just shitposting.

It's in quotes for a reason lol.

Ah, it was manufacturing, you know what, totally justified, who cares. this is moral.

im sure the business higher ups would have something to say about it, frankly i was just shitposting.

I do know where the CEO who sold us out for tens of millions of dollars lives. Think I should drive over and discuss the matter with him?

perhaps deliver him a spicy bottle. Although for legal reasons. This statement is merely a reflection of modern satirical humor, and is commentating on the modern socio-political climate.

Remember when YouTube had a use full real name policy? Arguing it would improve comment quality and would stop harassment etc. Yeah, didn't quite work out at all and thankfully they let the policy fizzle.

This is the best summary I could come up with:


(Ars will only refer to Monica by her first name so that she can speak freely about her experience using Glassdoor to review employers.)

Although it's common for many online users to link services at sign-up to Facebook or Gmail accounts to verify identity and streamline logins, for years, Glassdoor has notably allowed users to sign up for its service anonymously.

The EFF regularly defends Glassdoor users from being unmasked by retaliating employers.

She decided to go through with a data erasure request, which Glassdoor estimated could take up to 30 days.

In the meantime, her name remained on her profile, where it wasn't publicly available to employers but it could be used to link her to job reviews if Glassdoor introduced a bug in an update or data was ever breached, she feared.

"No one has the ability to see your user profile and the contents within it, meaning no one, including your employer, will be able to see your details," Glassdoor's employee wrote.


The original article contains 586 words, the summary contains 165 words. Saved 72%. I'm a bot and I'm open source!

Can confirm, they populated my data through a data broker at some point.

I guess the GOOD NEWS is the employer reviews are still anonymous.

Me too. Only I have an additional 22 tabs open lol

https://files.catbox.moe/09tx4e.png

How'd you delete your account? I don't see anything other than the option to deactivate mine.

Yeah, the deactivation link takes you to "delete" it, but they do have some legalese that suggests they could keep it to "enforce their agreements" among other things

Just deleted my account. I hardly used it anyway, so good job pushing me off the edge Glassdoor.

I did a CCPA data deletion request. Fuckers.

What is this and how is it done?

California Consumer Privacy Act. It gives consumers the right to tell companies to delete all data they have about you.

For glassdoor, that option is here, in their privacy requests page. Note the language "request" is just politeness for California residents - they must by law delete this info. While it's only the law for California residents, it looks like Glassdoor offers this option to everyone.

That's too bad, it saved me from a few toxic work places

Did Glassdoor somehow force users to use their real names on the site?

That's explained in the article. If Glassdoor somehow learns of the real name of an account they'll silently add that information to the account. Glassdoor is meant to be anonymous so such action can lead to repercussions.

They were automatically updating their profiles with info from 3rd party sources. This resulted in personal information being displayed without consent or warning, and wild inaccuracies like updating a profile to say a man was based in london when he was still very much in california

Is this a US change as im not seeing names in the UK version

Hilarious anyone would put their name into something autonomous