Xequecal wrote:
I still have issues with accepting that literally anything on the Internet that has your name even indirectly attached to it directly impacts your "professional reputation" and also reflects on your employer.
What happens when Blizzard (or any other company) decides to bring back Real ID? Does the fact that you used the word nigger a few times in a hastily-made WoW post a few years ago mean you should be unemployable for life?
This is where reputation, representation, anonymity, population size, reasonable expectation, and the Internet throw most people for a loop. Saying something ridiculous in a particular venue under reasonable expectations of anonymity is worlds different from saying something ridiculous in a venue where you are reasonably expected to represent a larger entity. Real ID was a problem due to the WoW population reasonably expecting some measure of anonymity, and Blizzard wanting to revoke that in favor of true identity. The WoW population, not wholly but a vocal enough subset, realized just how stupid they had acted while reasonably anonymous, and worried about the impact of that idiocy on their true identity. As they should.
Now, when you are operating under your true identity, you should take as much care with your image as if you were acting in full public view. Because you are.
Lenas wrote:
This is going to sound crazy, but here's an idea: just stop attributing the personal opinions of people to their employers. It's really not so hard.
It's not a problem of attribution. It's a problem of representation and reputation. When someone has positioned themselves as a representative of another entity,
they are always then a representative of that entity. This is the part that seems to elude you. If you bind your reputation and representation so closely, you must always take the utmost care with it.