3
dooter
3y

I recently was given the responsibility of finding interns for our company. In the process of reviewing applications, I Googled one of them. The first search result was her Facebook page so I clicked on it, and saw that many of her posts and pictures were set to “public.” I did not see anything out of the ordinary or really anything that would prevent her from getting a job, but decided to mention it to my boss and coworker anyway, just to see what they thought.

To my surprise, I was met by extreme resistance to what I had done. I was told that it is not okay to look someone up before an interview because what I find might “color my opinion of them” and that my own personal judgments might get in the way. I was under the impression that it is one’s personal responsibility to curate their web presence as they see fit and that whatever is found through a simple search is fair game. I was also under the impression that this is pretty standard these days. Am I wrong? Is looking up a potential intern or employee prior to an interview unethical?

Comments
  • 1
    It is getting pretty normal to look people up but I disagree with the practice too.

    You should really only look at whatever is provided in the CV imo.

    I mean the company is right, what if the person was a great fit for the job, but held different views from you and you disagreed with some of what they put on their social networks?

    You would be biased and more likely to reject a perfectly good candidate for being open on the internet and living their life.

    Im personally really against that practice, but you're not wrong when you say It's pretty common in the industry.
  • 0
    That's not to say you did anything wrong. I don't think It's such a big deal. It will just make the interview process even less objective, which is never good.

    Unfortunatelly completely blind interviews are not possible but I prefer to only read the CV and ask questions based on what's written there
  • 0
    This is standard practice. You did nothing wrong.
  • 0
    From what I've seen they're right. The background checks are to be done after the interview not before. It's not a privacy breach but subconscious cognitive biases are difficult to avoid once formed.
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