top | item 20557536

(no title)

throwaway66666 | 6 years ago

Some jobs require it. Not even super-secret top-hacker men-behind-the-curtain type of operations.

If you wanna be a senior sys admin for bed bath and beyond, you 'll be probably getting one.

discuss

order

Diederich|6 years ago

> If you wanna be a senior sys admin for bed bath and beyond, you 'll be probably getting one.

Huh. I was a very senior 'sys admin' type for an enormous retailer for over a decade, and polygraphs never came up for me or anyone else there.

Any idea why bed bath and beyond is into such a thing?

excalibur|6 years ago

My guess is that throwaway's statement was hyperbole, and Bed Bath and Beyond isn't a literal example of an employer that requires a polygraph. Instead it was an exaggeration meant to show how common the practice is in his circles.

the-pigeon|6 years ago

My guess would be. Some sys admin did something illegal (some sort of fraud or something). So management wanted changes to prevent that in the future. And the cover your ass move was "we'll use polygraphs on new people!".

the-pigeon|6 years ago

Wow. Never heard of a non-government agency using them.

Pretty clear sign of a messed up company culture.

outworlder|6 years ago

And one that trusts unscientific methods just because others use them.

That's not the kind of company you want to get involved, ever. If they do that during _hiring_ ...

giles_corey|6 years ago

The 1998 Employee Polygraph Protection Act largely prohibited the use of lie detectors for employee screening by private companies.