在網上寫東西要小心謹慎

不要隨便寫公司的東西. 這個人沒事在微軟 shipping-and-receiving facility 照 Power Mac G5 的照片. 微軟以洩露公司機密為由, 把他給解雇了. 這樣就上了報紙的頭條… Microsoft fires worker over weblog Michael Hanscom began keeping an online journal, commonly known as a weblog, several years ago. He started his job as a contract worker in Microsoft’s print shop last year. Last week, he mixed the two. This week, he’s looking for a new job, after becoming an unwilling case study in the fine line walked by corporate employees who write about work in their personal weblogs. It all started when Hanscom noticed something interesting on the loading dock on his way into work a week ago — three pallets of shiny new Apple Power Mac G5 computers, clearly destined for somewhere on the company’s Redmond campus. The scene wasn’t entirely surprising. Although the companies are in many ways rivals, Microsoft makes software for the Mac operating system, and Microsoft makes no secret of the fact that it tests competing technologies, including the Linux operating system. But Hanscom, a 30-year-old Seattle resident who has his own Power Mac G5 at home, found the arrival of the computers interesting enough to stop and snap a photo. Later, after getting home from work, he posted it to his weblog, under the words, “It looks like somebody over in Microsoft land is getting some new toys.” Under the photo, he explained that he had come across the computers at Microsoft’s shipping-and-receiving facility, which he identified as being in the same building as the print shop where he worked. He was careful, he says, not to photograph anything around the computers that would have indicated the location. On Monday, when Hanscom came into work, his manager asked him about the post and informed him that he was being let go. Hanscom says he took from the conversation that the post was considered a security risk because a careful reader could decipher from his description the location of the shipping-and-receiving department. According to Hanscom, he offered to take the post down, but he was told that wouldn’t prevent the company from letting him go. “I would have much rather have done that than have lost my paycheck,” he said yesterday. As the weblogging phenomenon has taken off, there have been isolated incidents around the country in which companies fired employees for posting in their personal weblogs work-related material that executives consider compromising or inappropriate. But Hanscom appears to be the first person let go for that reason from Microsoft, where an ever increasing number of employee webloggers regularly post work-related material. Microsoft spokeswoman Stacy Drake declined to comment specifically about Hanscom’s situation, citing a policy against discussing personnel matters. “However, we do recognize that weblogging is a legitimate form of communication,” Drake said. “As you know, a number of Microsoft employees have weblogs, and we respect and support their decision to do so, as long as they abide by our confidentiality agreements — which would apply to any form of external communication.” Hanscom isn’t sure, but he doesn’t think his firing had anything to do with the fact that the computers he photographed were Macs. He says he understands if Microsoft might have been concerned about the security implications of his posting, but he wishes the company would have figured out a way to correct the problem without firing him. He doesn’t recall signing any confidentiality agreement when he was hired. A long-term temporary worker, his job at the company was through an employment agency. Rebecca Blood, author of “The Weblog Handbook,” agreed that Microsoft could have resolved the situation better, at least based on the available information about what happened. “If Microsoft is genuinely concerned about the physical security of their campus, this wouldn’t have been a good way to handle that,” she said. “Firing people who inadvertently break a rule doesn’t prevent other people from breaking it again.” Hanscom, meanwhile, has become a minicelebrity after technology sites, including the popular Slashdot, picked up his Monday weblog post describing his firing. He has gotten calls from representatives of news organizations, and he woke up yesterday to more than 250 e-mails from people offering comments about the situation. “I couldn’t believe that it was getting that much attention,” Hanscom said, explaining that his weblog is usually read mostly by people close to him. “I never expected it to go beyond family and friends.” On the Web: www.michaelhanscom.com/eclecticism

華大的犯罪區…晚上要小心喔!

華大校區的北邊部份, 尤其介於 NE 45th 和 NE 47th 之間. Seattle Times 的報導: Trouble has often found a home on Greek Row For decades, it has been no secret that Greek Row — the several blocks immediately north of the University of Washington and home to fraternities, sororities and communal student rentals — is one of the city’s liveliest neighborhoods. It’s also one of the city’s more crime-ridden neighborhoods. Early Sunday, three parties spilled into the streets and a riot ensued, leaving one car overturned, a mattress ablaze and several police cars damaged. A Seattle Times analysis of the past five years of Seattle police reports confirms the Greek Row stereotype — that crime and violence north of the university are concentrated in those same several blocks that thousands of young adults call their first homes away from home. And September — when students move back to school — is traditionally the worst month of the year by far. The number of crimes in September over the past five years has often been double that of other months. In the eight-block area known as Greek Row, police have typically logged more than 200 crimes a year. And predictably, the farther away you move from the university and Greek Row, the fewer crimes are reported. For example, for the busiest and most heavily populated block, the 4500 block of 17th Avenue Northeast, 255 crimes were reported from 1998 through 2002. In the next block north, the 4700 block of 17th Avenue Northeast, 180 crimes were reported. And the block north of that, the 5000 block of 17th Avenue Northeast, had 97 crimes. In Greek Row, the most common crime is theft, accounting for 29 percent of all crimes reported. Next are burglary and property damage, each making up 12.8 percent of all crimes reported. Assaults are fourth most prevalent, followed by auto theft. In a neighborhood known for its alcohol-fueled problems, liquor-violation reports make up only 5 percent of all crimes reported. Serious violent crimes remain relatively rare. Robbery makes up less than 1 percent of the crimes reported, and rape less than half of a percent of all crimes on Greek Row. Officers in the North Precinct focus on the area with extra patrols on weekends, and a liaison officer visits with fraternities and sororities to communicate crime-prevention tips, said Deanna Nollette, a police spokeswoman. But the area is inherently transient — students live there a few years before moving on — and the demographics make for difficult police work. “You get a lot of young people who are relatively inexperienced with alcohol and relatively inexperienced with life, and you get them away from home for the first time,” Nollette said. “You get a huge number of kids with a large amount of alcohol, and in that group they will do things that individually they would never, never do. And you get a few kids doing some stupid things, and pretty soon others join in.” Three parties, including one at an annex of a fraternity that lost its official University of Washington recognition two years ago, provided the people and the fuel that led to the riot across from the university campus over the weekend. As many as 300 people had converged on the area for partying and drinking, but police say only 30 to 50 people actively participated in the melee. One person was arrested. The riot began brewing about 11 Saturday night, when two police officers went to the 4700 block of 18th Avenue Northeast to deal with noise complaints about large house parties on the block. The officers found hundreds of students gathered on the front lawns of the houses. At the first house, where as many as 150 people were gathered, the renters were cooperative and shut the music off, according to police. Same with the second house. But the partygoers then converged on the third house — which police sources identified as an annex of the Delta Kappa Epsilon fraternity. DKE is not a fraternity recognized by the UW, having been expelled by the university’s Interfraternity Council in 2001 after allegations of hazing rituals. At the fraternity annex, police contacted a student who identified himself as the DKE president, according to police sources. He agreed to shut the music off. But then the partygoers in front of the house began to boo and yell expletives at the officers, the report said. The two officers on the porch, boxed in by the crowd, heard glass breaking and realized most of the partygoers were holding bottles. Unable to reach the street through the crowd, they sprayed pepper spray in the air to clear a path. The officers left the immediate area and called for backup. By 1 a.m., the crowd had moved into the intersection of 18th Avenue Northeast and Northeast 47th Street, where a car was flipped over, a mattress was ignited in the street, and passing vehicles and police cars were dented and smashed with hurled bottles. It took some 60 officers to disperse the crowd. Alex Perino, a DKE member who was walking to the house yesterday with a friend, said he saw the whole fracas but that DKE members didn’t participate. “There were lots of people being very drunk and doing stupid stuff,” he said. What started as two or three ordinary parties got out of hand, Perino said, as more people arrived and the parties spilled into the street. “It didn’t involve fraternities and sororities,” he said. “A lot of people showed up who didn’t even go to the U Dub.” That assessment was supported yesterday at a briefing given by Seattle Police Chief Gil Kerlikowski and UW Vice President for Student Affairs Ernest Morris. They said the one person who had been arrested is not a university student. But Morris stressed that Greek Row bears some responsibility for the crowds that gathered Sunday morning. “Being in a setting like that, by not walking away you provide a venue, a setting for those who want to break the law,” Morris said. Recently, much of the police presence in Greek Row has come down to one officer, Jake Thompson, who routinely checks on parties that have been registered in advance. At the briefing, he said Sunday’s events could not be traced to just one house. And, as in any other neighborhood, residents are free to mingle in the street. However, Thompson said he had not seen anything as violent as Sunday’s riot in his 10 years on the job. For that reason, the department is adding 12 officers to patrols in the neighborhood and is shifting other units into backup positions. Kerlikowski said that does not mean police necessarily believe there is danger of more riots. “This year started off differently,” he said. “We didn’t have a fire before, and we didn’t have a car overturned.” Those elements of the riot have rattled some residents. Gerald Bucklin, who owns and lives in a house at 18th Avenue Northeast and Northeast 47th Street where he also rents to 18 student tenants, said loud, rowdy parties are fairly frequent in the neighborhood. He wasn’t home when this one became violent. “It sounds like it was a little bigger and a little out of hand,” he said. “It kind of concerns me. It’s the fires and the violent side of it that I hope is not a trend.” Next door, Bob Torney, a 33-year resident who also takes in student tenants, said he’s all in favor of students’ enjoying college and having the occasional party. But he said matters have gotten worse the past few years. “I’m disturbed about it,” he said. “I’m amazed the rest of the community isn’t — especially the university.” Neither Bucklin nor Torney had any particular beef with the DKE house. But the riot came at a bad time if the fraternity hopes to re-establish its UW ties. Recognition by the Interfraternity Council means access to the precious list of incoming freshmen for recruiting, and it means use of university facilities and participation in organized Greek events, such as social functions with sororities. But the flip side is that without formal recognition, the university has virtually no supervisory control over the DKE house, said Bob Roseth, a university spokesman. Since the Dekes aren’t members of the Interfraternity Council, they don’t have to follow IFC rules, which include fairly strict procedures over alcohol parties, including filing for permits in advance. “We have no leverage,” Roseth said. “The leverage we have is with the recognition agreement. So they’re completely independent of us. Basically, they’re in the same situation as people in the apartments are.” Seattle Times database specialist Justin Mayo contributed to this report.