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07.15.2008 11:09 am

Some employers are blocking access to time wasters like Facebook and MySpace

St. Louis Post-Dispatch
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A week or so ago, I sat down at my desk to find a look of panic on the face of one of my coworkers. “They’re blocking Facebook,” she said.

They, of course, are the mysterious men and women who make up our tech support department. Oh no, I thought. This can’t be. I opened my browser and tried to get into Facebook. Nothing.

So there we sat, stunned by the implications. I fired off an email to see if “they” could tell me what was going on. But as it turned out, it was just a bunch of wasted emotion. It was nothing more than the typical Internet glitch. A few minutes passed and the world was right again.

Well, apparently about 25 percent of you aren’t so lucky. Nearly one in four employers are blocking access to social networking sites, according to a survey released today by the Chicago-based job consulting firm Challenger, Gray & Christmas, Inc.

The survey found that most companies (59 percent) don’t actually have any sort of formal policy targeting sites like Facebook and MySpace. In fact, nearly half of them said they were only concerned with whether or not their employees got their work done.

But 23 percent have put their collective feet down, blocking all access to those sites.  Interestingly, one-third of the companies surveyed said they considered the sites to be a major drain on worker output. So it’s probably not much of a stretch to think the number of bans is going to grow over time.

“Social networking sites are a relatively new phenomenon, which is why the majority of companies still have no formal policy regarding their use. However, that is changing daily as more companies come to realize both the pros and the cons of giving employees access to these sites,” said John A. Challenger, chief executive officer of job firm.

I’d love to know if any local companies have taken this step? Do you work for someone who won’t let you get into your favorite social networking site? Should access be banned at work?

16 comments

Comments are closed.

If you are blocked at work, you can go through a site to get you access if you are a truely desparate person. http://www.wormhole.com will take to any site that you want. but becareful. your job could ride on it.

— andy
1:32 pm July 15th, 2008

I block these sites due to the malicious nature of them. I have seen things from spyware to virus. People go to these sites and click away. There are profiles on myspace that are there to do nothing but infect users computers.

— IT Dir
1:48 pm July 15th, 2008

My company blocks all social networking sites. I’ve tested to see what’s on their list — it appears to be very comprehensive. They also block all major webmail sites. Last, they block all anonymizing sites, such as the one mentioned above. That list is also very comprehensive. They even block the Internet Archive! Since my job sometimes involves background research on peoples’ Web presence, this “precaution” has the perverse effect of making me go home to do my job.

— UCityDave
2:34 pm July 15th, 2008

I agree with IT Dir, and I do not go to these sites even from my home PC.

— Pugman
2:38 pm July 15th, 2008

My company had Facebook blocked for a while, but it was quickly unblocked when we began using it as a recruiting tool. Even so, those of us who work with the recruiting page have joked that we feel dirty using Facebook even for work purposes.

— Mary
2:58 pm July 15th, 2008

Hello aren’t we all adults WORKING. I guess company’s have to do what they feel necessary to keep work production up. I personally don’t waste my time with these sites.

— Worker
3:03 pm July 15th, 2008

My company blocks several sites. There is a blocker that pops up telling that “______” has been blocked. The blank is usually entertainment, games, etc.

— Jessika
3:14 pm July 15th, 2008

I don’t know too many employers that allow employees to goof around on Myspace during company time. When I worked as a first line supervisor for a business organization, we had to closely monitor our employees and even let go one repeat violator, who received more than her fair share of warnings. I think it’s just common sense to do personal things on your dollar, right?

— Scott
3:20 pm July 15th, 2008

My employer has a whole list of sites they block including facebook, myspace, the MO lottery page, anything with games, etc. If we try to access one of the pages we get a picture of a little old lady waving her finger at you with a big stop sign. Luckily they haven’t blocked stltoday.com! :)

— crdsfn80
3:27 pm July 15th, 2008

But this person wastes time on stltoday during work hours.
“worker” ha!!!

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Hello aren’t we all adults WORKING. I guess company’s have to do what they feel necessary to keep work production up. I personally don’t waste my time with these sites.
— Worker
3:03 pm July 15th, 2008

— Dink McDinkus
3:30 pm July 15th, 2008

Companies need to get over themselves. Blocking sites makes workers less productive. They end up spending time trying to figure a workaround the site, or complaining that they can’t get to it. All it does is p*ss off your employees, what most companies claim to be their most valuable asset. Companies need to realize that life doesn’t stop while their employees are at work. And as long as the work gets done, who cares if they take 5 minutes to check out Facebook or read their personal Yahoo email?

— Manager
3:33 pm July 15th, 2008

This is interesting. As I sit here reading the “news”, at work, when I should be doing something productive.

— Ryan J.
4:05 pm July 15th, 2008

The reason these sites are blocked is becasue people use this as a vehicle to put confidential company info onto a public site. This is the way to get around being tracked. You cannot email these documents to yourself as the email is trackable.

Let’s say I work at a bank, and have access to all your account records. I can have this informatin put on a PDF file, and attach it to a myspace page for the world to see. You wouldn’t like that…would ya? Now by blocking the sites, this can’t happen.

— Really???
4:20 pm July 15th, 2008

We block social networking sites, chat, etc. as well as proxies, etc. by default. You can however visit social sites, use chat, etc. if your supervisor approves.

— WT
9:01 am July 17th, 2008

Should access be banned at WORK? Obviously a rhetorical question.

— Sven Gali
6:44 pm July 17th, 2008

How many of us information workers do company work at home or stay at the office late? This use to be our own time. For better or worse the lines between “work” and “life” have blurred. If jobs were done when the clock strikes 5 p.m. perhaps you could argue that 100% of that time at work was your employer’s. But as we all seem expected to get the job done no matter how long it takes, it seems like spending some of your office time on mindlessness is a healthy break.

— Glenn Fannick
7:15 am July 18th, 2008