Some Glassdoor customers are deleting their accounts after the job posting and evaluations website began including their full names to their profiles.
The adjustments come after Glassdoor built-in with the skilled networking platform Fishbowl, which it acquired in 2021.
Glassdoor has since modified its phrases of service to require all customers to be verified by including their names and jobs to their profiles. Its assist web page says it “won’t ever share your private info with out your permission.”
An individual’s full title on their profile can’t be seen by others, however customers can select to show their title when posting a assessment, or stay nameless.
When new customers now signal as much as the platform, they’re requested to supply their full title, job title and employer. Beforehand solely an electronic mail tackle was required.
Josh Thieler, a longtime Glassdoor person, instructed Enterprise Insider the adjustments had been a “betrayal of belief” and that he’d closed his account. “I eliminated my posts and deleted my account to sign to Glassdoor that I cannot assist their choice to reverse course and destroy the anonymity of tens of tens of millions of staff.”
Glassdoor warns in its privateness coverage that, because it collects extra private information about customers that’s displayed publicly, there may very well be cases that its mechanisms to guard customers’ anonymity “aren’t excellent.”
The privateness coverage, which was up to date in July, states: “Whereas we take your anonymity extraordinarily critically, and make our greatest efforts to make sure that demographic information does not inadvertently result in your identification, there are cases during which person identification or demographic information disclosure could happen.”
BI noticed a number of posts on social media platforms from customers claiming they had been deleting their Glassdoor accounts.
Sunguk Moon, CEO of rival platform Blind, instructed BI he was upset to listen to what occurred to professionals on Glassdoor. “You should not cease at being semi-anonymous — you must let professionals be utterly nameless,” he stated.
Blind verifies its customers with their work electronic mail addresses, and does not require them to disclose their actual names or identities. All posts are solely nameless.
A Glassdoor consultant instructed Ars Technica that customers can at all times “select to be totally nameless, or reveal parts of their id.”
Glassdoor did not instantly reply to a request for remark from Enterprise Insider, made outdoors regular working hours.