Posted by fantasycouriers on February 17, 2009
The job market at the moment is tough, and it seems tougher for some people than others, and in particular World of Warcraft players seem to have been singled out.
Gamesindustry.biz reports today that employers are specifically requesting recruitment consultants not to send them World of Warcraft players.
The post, spotted cites a recruiter working in the online media industry as saying that employers think WOW players are too sleep-deprived and distracted to be effective in the workplace.
“Employers specifically instruct him not to send them World of Warcraft players,” said the poster. “He said there is a belief that WOW players cannot give 100 per cent because their focus is elsewhere, their sleeping patterns are often not great, et cetera.”
This seems to fly in the face of many recent articles which focus on the positive of MMOG games such as World of Warcraft, where the skills necessary to persevere and suceed in the game are the same types of skills that can develop a hardworking and diligent employee. Infact President Obama’s cabinet advisors even include WoW players.
But in the meantime, unless you’re after a job leading the country, it may be best to keep World of Warcraft off your CV.
Posted in Games Industry News | Tagged: business game, business games, employer bans wow players, fantasy couriers, fantasy games, fantasy league games, mmog games, simulation games, wow, WOW and recruitment | 1 Comment »
Posted by fantasycouriers on February 4, 2009
MySpace bans 90,000 users after sex offender search reports James Quilter, Brand Republic
“MySpace has banned 90,000 registered sex offenders and paedophiles following an investigation by online security experts. New York-based internet security consultancy Sentinel used a database containing the details of more than 700,000 registered sex offenders to target and remove relevant individuals.
The move is part of an initiative to make the site safer for consumers. Other features will include more sophisticated ways of verifying age and limiting the ability of adults to view the details of under-18s.”
Although sites such as Myspace and Facebook are supposed to be restricted to over 14’s, in reality, many younger people register. It is virtually impossible for My Space to strictly enforce it’s age limits. Young people, in particular teenagers, have a certain naivety about them which leaves them vulnerable on websites. Older users are more aware of the “signals” that what they write, and the images they show, on their profiles, and the messages that these are sending out to other webusers.
My space is seen as the venue for the older teens, those that have outgrown Bebo, but don’t really suit facebook. And as such My Space can be misused by sex offenders. It is reassuring for everybody involved with education and young internet users to see My Space taking such steps.
Posted in Education | Tagged: my space, safe web use by children, safer websites, sex offenders, teen web users | 1 Comment »