HACKER Q&A
📣 throwaway43425

Is it a red flag if a job doxxes its devs?


by doxxing i mean things like expectations around having your company github profile being public with your name in the handle and profile and a picture, or adding you to their public team page where they show your photo and name and some details about you, or expecting you to have and maintain an open linkedin profile. how do you push back on this kind of behavior without losing the job?

i want to work on the code, not on building the company's social media brand or online presence for them...i also don't like talking about work outside of work and this includes wanting to have boundaries about my online presence as well so that any associations online are entirely my own instead of related to where i work for a day job.

i appreciate any advice in how to best communicate this, English isn't my first language and i'm also not very good at saying no to things.


  👤 nullindividual Accepted Answer ✓
You've got three options:

1. Live with it. 2. Quit. 3. Say something and choose option 1 or 2. If you're lucky, they'll provide an option 4, just be prepared for option 2. 4. Be defiant or passive, don't do it and see what happens.

If you're living outside of the US in a workers paradise, this may not apply to you and you might be better off than the rest of us living under an oppressive capitalist regime that consumes people, taking their last breath for that next hundredth of a percent "productivity" improvement.


👤 Hatrix
You could tell them that recruiters for other companies use that info to bombard their employees with other job opportunities.

👤 porkbeer
If you don't want your name attached to what you do, you need to find a career where you do. I can't imagine not wanting to have my work seen if I think I am doing good work. Pride, unlike what some people say, is not for what you are born as, but for what you accomplish through conscious effort.

👤 WallyFunk
> by doxxing i mean things like expectations around having your company github profile being public

It's the other way around for me. I like my work to be publicly viewable on GH because these days it's the bare minimum amount of effort required for visibility into your online persona and demonstrates how committed you are on delivering end products.

I also have a basic blog where I do technical deep dives on various matters, to virtue signal to potential employers that I'm knowledgeable in certain areas.

Proper and malicious doxxing would be outing the precise location where you live and listing your private phone number without your consent. This has never happened to me.