Wednesday, March 28, 2012
© Copyright 2013
Gwinnett Daily Post
ALPHARETTA (AP) -- Alpharetta city officials say they are now checking the Facebook accounts of applicants for police and firefighter jobs in the suburban Atlanta community.
City officials say that they're also checking the Twitter and YouTube accounts of job applicants.
Alpharetta police spokesman George Gordon said officials are looking for signs of potentially embarrassing or legally troubling posts or material that suggests applicants have biases against ethnicities.
Gordon said officials don't ask applicants for their passwords, but they require them to disclose the account and open it for viewing when they are with a background investigator.
The idea of checking the social media sites of job applicants has become controversial across the nation, particularly when employers request passwords to the sites.
More like this story
- Employers ask job seekers for Facebook passwords ( March 20, 2012 )
- Burger King Twitter account hacked ( February 18, 2013 )
- Ga. teen driver dies after car crashes, catches fire ( October 24, 2012 )
- Leaders discover new age of networking, one tweet at a time ( August 2, 2009 )
- Subway 'crisis': Is footlong sub really 11 inches? ( January 17, 2013 )

Comments
richtfan 1 year, 2 months ago
this is wrong on so many accounts. those are private accounts for a reason. if you wanna read someone's facebook posts, then have that person friend you. if he doesn't, then you have a decision to make. but don't act like it's your right prior to hiring him/her. same thing with twitter and youtube. that is their personal business.
Sign in to comment