Related: Glassdoor updated my profile to add my real name and location (cellio.dreamwidth.org) | 819 points by throwaway_08932 6 days ago | 316 comments | https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=39705788
It's more than OK to lie to corporations and give them a fake name and email address. I do it every day. I've found this is the only way to actually protect your privacy.
I mean that's fine, but you are the registered owner 》renter of that domain, so you are linked to it in a database somewhere, even if your info is behind whoisguard-style obfuscation. Even if unlikely, should a dataset get exposed or the service stop functioning as intended, you're linked. No real worry for singing up for future junk-mail, but risks escalate when employment is at stake.
A sinister method is to state your birthday as Jan 2nd 1919. Just enough time to be remotely plausible. Bugs are sure to follow the account for the remainder of its existence.
No you can't - they can still link which is the whole problem. The advertising industry has built such a tracking apparatus that some part of your system, maybe even your browser audio, is going to give up your fingerprint.
Hm. Went to see if I have some long-forgotten account—yep! Try to deactivate account… but it’s been so long since I logged in that they won’t let me do anything until I answer a bunch of stupid questions including giving them my name.
Sigh.
[edit] it said the name would be used for “verification” (?!?!) but a fake name worked long enough to let me disable the account, anyway.
I just ran into the same thing. Using Chrome dev tools I deleted the overlays prompting me to enter info and that revealed the user menu at the top right. First, I changed my email address to a throwaway address since I doubt they're deleting anything, and then I deleted it.
ChatGPT thinks the direct link to the settings page is (or it's just a hallucination, I'm not sure) https://www.glassdoor.com/profile/settings_input.htm
Blind seems to be where tech people post reviews now. Non-tech people just use an alternative Google account and post the review on the company's page Google Maps reviews page.
I went to go log in to see what I had left there, first off it wouldn't let me see the one review I had written, and second I'm now stuck in a "community" popup that won't let me proceed without employment info.
They made that change a while ago. When I first logged in and saw it, so began the illustrious Taco Bell food service career of Frank Offerman, known to his friends as "F. Off".
> I'll bet you all the donuts they will not be deleting my data.
If you're in California (or the EU), I bet they will. Otherwise, you're free to file a complaint with the Attorney General. Wouldn't it be nice to have a federal CPRA?
So… instead of moderating fake flowery reviews from the HR, doxing real honest negative reviews to scare away people from leaving those. Saves them a ton of money and headache on moderation, verification and also disgrunted customers(employers).
Buried: 141. Glassdoor is now adding real names to user profiles without consent (teamblind.com) 72 points by mry 1 hour ago | flag | hide | 33 comments
This is pretty plainly a terrible move, and might destroy them with lawsuits from the users who are able to show harm. (Though I think most of those harmed won't be able to prove it, nor even know for certain it's the reason for specific instances of harm to them.)
Interesting is that maybe prominent among those harmed by this underhanded privacy violation are... us techbros.
And it'll hit us where we feel it most, which is in our large salaries -- or lack of same, once we get fired for criticism speech on Glassdoor, and then HR hiring pipeline systems for some other jobs start denylisting our applications, for being a troublemaker who makes public negative comments about other employers on Glassdoor.
If experiencing this harm close to home -- to ourselves and friends/colleagues -- translates into conscientiousness when we're the ones making decisions about other people's privacy, then that's a silver lining.
More generally, you know how sometimes someone is harmed, and that person then goes on to harm others in the same way (as if inspired), but when a different person is harmed, they instead go on to defend others from harm (as if inspired)? It seems the latter person is better for society.