She had interviewed and met both remotely and in person, this guy was merely an HR drone confirming her documentation. I was a little bent when she told me he had asked her to remove her blur filter “to have a look at her working environment, make sure it’s not cluttered” (something along those lines). No one else at this company requested such. Was he way out of line?

I should note, this is my PC in our living room and not where she will be working from. And this guy wants a look around our home?! Told my wife to bring this up once she’s settled in, ask HR if this is policy. She started today!

She thinks it’s a racism thing. I’m not so sure, but I don’t have any other explanation.

  • @shalafiOP
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    913 months ago

    I’ve been remote the past 5 years as well. I’ve never heard of anyone, anywhere, for any reason being asked to un-blur video. Customers, vendors, coworkers, everyone does it. In fact, I consider it more professional, and certainly less distracting to do so unless you background is 100% work dedicated. Hence my post.

    • @primrosepathspeedrun
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      123 months ago

      okay but consider that you don’t have as much surveilance of your employees, and without that, how are you supposed to discipline them?

        • @primrosepathspeedrun
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          23 months ago

          I was riffing on the original and translated titles of foucault’s most well known work. whether it was sarcasm or not; 🤷‍♀️

    • Scrubbles
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      63 months ago

      I agree! I brought this up with my team and they all laughed at it, and brought up too that “Wouldn’t it look more professional having it on?”

    • @[email protected]
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      53 months ago

      Even in a 100% work dedicated office, there is no background that looks as professional and uncluttered as a blurred one.

      I only unblur if I’m showing off my bookshelf or video game posters