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Employers need to face up to the age of Facebook 
The UK's Facebook users are 3.5 million accidents waiting to happen, warns the 
TUC in new advice published today (Thursday) 
for both employers and their staff. 
http://www.tuc.org.uk/law/tuc-13641-f0.cfm 

Visit the addresses above to view the documents in full, in print format or in 
text-only format. 

The full text of the press release is below.  Charts, tables and other 
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reproduced, but you can view these on the web site using the links above. 

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date: 29 August 2007 
embargo: 00:01hrs Thursday 30 August 2007 

Employers need to face up to the age of Facebook 

The UK's Facebook users are 3.5 million accidents waiting to happen, warns the 
TUC in new advice published today (Thursday) 
for both employers and their staff. 

In guidance available on workSMART, its working life website, the TUC advises 
employers that they should have in place policies 
covering the use of email and the web, including social networking sites, at 
work, so that there are no nasty surprises for either 
employer or employee should things ever go wrong. 

The TUC advice suggests that whilst employers are completely within their 
rights to forbid staff from using sites such as 
Facebook, MySpace or Bebo in work time, a total ban may be something of an 
over-reaction. 

Instead the TUC suggests that sensible employers, realising that their staff 
spend much of their waking hours in work and lead 
busy lives, should be trusted to spend a few minutes of their lunchbreak 
'poking' their friends or making plans for outside work. 

The guidance accepts that employees are paid to do a job, and it is clearly not 
acceptable for someone to spend hours a day on 
social networking sites when they should be getting on with their work. 
However, policies drawn up with the involvement of 
staff can set out will be and what will not be allowed. 

The TUC advice also says that not enough workplaces are being up-front about 
what they expect from staff in terms of personal 
conduct when using social networking sites. As a result, a number of employers 
have disciplined staff for their conduct online, 
and more cases are likely to follow unless some sensible precautions are taken. 

Work is a major part of our lives, and staff have always discussed aspects of 
their jobs in private with their friends and family, 
says the TUC. Now that online social networking is becoming mainstream however, 
many of these private conversations are 
written on the web, potentially searchable by the public. 

Employers may have valid concerns about commercial confidentiality or 
reputation damage, but in most cases they should not 
over-react by attempting to stop staff from using such tools to help organise 
their personal lives. Working together with staff 
and their unions to devise a sensible conduct policy (for online and offline 
personal lives) that everyone is aware of, would 
prevent problems from arising in the first place. 

TUC General Secretary Brendan Barber said: 'Simply cracking down on use of new 
web tools like Facebook is not a sensible 
solution to a problem, which is only going to get bigger. It's unreasonable for 
employers to try to stop their staff from having a 
life outside work, just because they can't get their heads around the 
technology. Better to invest a little time in working out 
sensible conduct guidelines, so that there don't need to be any nasty surprises 
for staff or employers.' 

The TUC also warns that employers who take equal opportunities in recruitment 
seriously should not be tempted to check out 
the profiles of job applicants on Facebook. As only a minority of potential 
recruits will have public profiles on social networks, 
using information from this source can give an unfair advantage or disadvantage 
to certain candidates. 

NOTES TO EDITORS: 

The TUC's advice to employees can be found at 
www.worksmart.org.uk/rights/socialnetworking  Sample questions answered 
include: 

o Can an employer refuse to appoint me to a job because of my Facebook profile? 

o Can my boss stop us using Facebook at work? 

o Should I accept a Facebook friend request from my boss? 

o Can my boss tell me to close my personal Facebook account? 

The TUC's briefing for employers can be found at 
www.tuc.org.uk/extras/facinguptofacebook.pdf 

Contacts: 

Media enquiries: Elly Brenchley T: 020 7467 1337; M: 07900 910624;  E: [EMAIL 
PROTECTED] 

Liz Chinchen T: 020 7467 1248; M: 07778 158175; E: [EMAIL PROTECTED] 

------------------------------------------------------------------------ 

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Trades Union Congress 
Congress House 
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30 Aug 2007 03:49
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