sexual suggestions to a female
employee. Initially, the notes were fairly innocuous -- for example,
"That was a great-looking dress you had on yesterday." Over time, they
progressed into obscenity. The really funny part was that about half of
each note would be more or less pornographic, and the other half would
be perfectly reasonable business correspondence.
The employee, being far smarter than her boss, simply saved copies of
the notes. When the situation got out of control, she took them to the
human resources department. Everything she needed to prove her case
was right there, including the dates and times the messages were sent.
Her manager, of course, was fired.
With a milder form of harassment -- for example, Joe Schmoe keeps
sending the blonde joke of the day to everyone in the department -- less
drastic steps might be in order. If you don't object to other people reading blonde jokes but don't want to get them yourself, send a reply to
one of Joe's messages and ask him to take you off his mailing list. If
you feel that his use of company resources is inappropriate and should
be stopped, tell him so. But in either case, keep copies of everything. If
the situation ever escalates, you'll have backup.
Right up there with the email harassers and the rumor-mongers are the
people who get kicks out of sending worms and viruses throughout
cyberspace. Cornell graduate student
Robert Tappan Morris became
notorious in 1988, when he shut down large areas of the Internet with a
program -- variously described as a worm or as a virus -- that succeeded
beyond his wildest dreams.
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