End Notes


1. One important difference, however, was that the Shugborough Home estate cave was larger than most corporate cubicles.

2. Susan Bowles, "Background checks: Beware and be prepared," USA Today Careers Network (April 10, 2002).

3. Sally Richards, "Resume Fraud: Don't Lie to Get That Job!," www.hightechcareers.com, downloaded on 23 July 2002 from www.hightechcareers.com/doc699/nextstep699.html.

4. "Resume Padding Is Common, According to New York Times," Business Wire (May 29, 2002).

5. Kim Clark, "The Detectives," Business 2.0 (April 1997).

6. Also cited in Clark's article was the accounting firm Arthur Andersen, which was then actively pursuing a piece of the private investigator market. Thanks to the recent Enron debacle, however, the now-defunct accounting firm has instead turned into a major source of income for corporate investigators.

7. Andrew Edgecliff-Johnson, "Corporate Security: Industry Comes Out of the Dark Shadows," The Financial Times (April 10, 2001).

8. Although it is illegal to do so, officers have been known to pick up some extra cash by running the names of applicants through the NCIC for employer friends or former colleagues.

9. Merely one of the many federal facilities that has wound up in a mountainous and sparsely populated state, thanks to the longevity and largesse of Senator Robert Byrd.

10. Landry v. Attorney General, ——— Mass. ——— (1999) (challenging constitutionality of DNA database).

11. Chris Oakes, "Usenet Sale: Sounds to Silence?," Wired.com (October 25, 2000). Downloaded from the Web on 27 October 2000 from www.wired.com/news/print/0,1294,39622,00.html.

12. Bill E. Branscum, "A Bad Rapp" (1999). Quoted from the website for Oracle International, P.A. and available at www.oracleinternational.com/articles/rapp.htm.

13. Vance Packard, The Naked Society (New York: David McKay Company, Inc., 1964), pp. 59–66.

14. Steiner, whose cartoon appeared nearly ten years ago in the July 5, 1993, edition of the New Yorker, was prescient. Public interest in the Internet did not begin to take off until two years later, when the World Wide Web helped make the Internet more accessible to the average user.




The Naked Employee. How Technology Is Compromising Workplace Privacy
Naked Employee, The: How Technology Is Compromising Workplace Privacy
ISBN: 0814471498
EAN: 2147483647
Year: 2003
Pages: 93

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