I've tried to bring this up with management but have been told they don't see any issues and I should drop it. Am I overreacting here? Is this normal in a corporate environment? I get that with remote work, things have become more casual, but not too sure if this is too far.
In case you don't know, it's a giant golden statue of our protagonist giving a thumbs up, with scantily clad ladies laying at his feet.
Of course, the resolution was very high, but the thumbnail very.. small, so nobody noticed the ladies, until they upgraded some software that allowed one to click on said thumbnails, and hilarity ensued when my superiors understood what I'd been using for a (customer facing) profile picture for almost 2 years.
Nothing came out of it, I changed my picture..
Now I'm a boring black-white headshot like everyone else, and that's fine too..
To be honest, that's not the part of professional standards you should worry about.. How's the stuff they do? Do they put some pride into doing good work? Are they honest and responsible when their blunders float to the top ?
People grow out of thinking furry pictures are appropriate profile pictures.. But they don't grow out of not caring about doing shoddy work.
(Aristotle)
One that really gets under my skin is being told "thank you" at a store or restaurant. One time a worker told me thank you from all the way across the McDonalds; just yelled it across the room like no person would ever do outside of work. It's not normal human behavior. I didn't do anything to benefit them. They're not saying thank you, they're performing an arbitrary action so they'll continue to be allowed to work to survive. It's done out of fear of starvation and homelessness.
Stop making people wear stupid "professional" clothing too. It's useless. You have to be all careful and not get your pretty little useless clothes dirty. "OMG is that a wrinkle? Please someone help me do this basic task because I can't get my little outfit dirty".
I say stop trying to make people act like robots. The life is already being sucked out of the everything in every way the parasites can manage to find. Why make it worse?
Is there a policy on using portrait photos of oneself at your company? Then the profile photos should indeed be changed, because they're not photos of oneself, but drawings of cartoonish animals.
Otherwise there is no issue here but your understanding of subcultures and these three members of your team. I invite you to talk to them directly, mention the sex thing, and watch hilarity ensue.
> I've tried to bring this up with management but have been told they don't see any issues and I should drop it.
They probably value their contribution to the company over potential misunderstandings should these developers come into contact with customers via Teams. Management might not know what furries are. They might have googled it and found it to be benign. They also might have reacted that way due to the way you presented the issue, or interact with management or your team in general. It's impossible to tell from your post alone.
> Am I overreacting here?
Yes, but that is understandable if you believe that it's a sex thing.
> Is this normal in a corporate environment? I get that with remote work, things have become more casual, but not too sure if this is too far.
Depends on the company. Some may have policies on profile pictures, none of those will explicitly ban furry avatar pictures.
Good luck with the younger generation, Gigachad!
Otherwise, I'm hoping we're getting closer to a point where we don't judge people based off of what they look like or what profile pics they use.
Yes, always has, always will, for every generation.
If you get enough people who don't line animal pfp, it's not professional. If people don't care, it's professional enough.
> I get that with remote work, things have become more casual, but not too sure if this is too far.
Too far for what? Has anyone actually complained, or do you project your own view as something a customer may potentially complain about in the future? If you're just worried about the looks... maybe you should think why that bothers you.
That said I'm approaching the old fart age and it's not how I'd want my employees representing my company, if I had one...
HN is not your supervisor.