HP Spying Scandal: The News Keeps Getting Worse
I found a really good blog entry by Chris Raymond about the HP scandal (sent by my good friend and comrade-in-ethics Nancy Smith, author of Workplace Spirituality–one day I’ll have to meet her!)
As an ethics writer (Principled Profit: Marketing That Puts People First) and blogger ( https://www.principledprofit.com/good-business-blog/ ), I am completely appalled at HP’s actions–and the more I learn, the worse it gets. This is the first I’ve heard that the ethics officer actually was aware of these egregious violations and chose to protect the company instead of doing the right thing.
I used to have a lot of respect for HP, influenced in no small measure by an amazing book called The Soul in the Computer by Barbara Waugh–but that ws then, this is now. I own an HP computer and an HP printer–but it will be a very long time before I buy another one.
Rumor has it that after the Chairman resigned late last week that two more HP officers will resign: the head of global security and, yes, the ethics officer. This is a textbook example of how the most important asset of a company — its reputation — can be devalued in the marketplace by its own people. It is shameful.
Rumor has it that after the Chairman resigned late last week that two more HP officers will resign: the head of global security and, yes, the ethics officer. This is a textbook example of how the most important asset of a company — its reputation — can be devalued in the marketplace by its own people. It is shameful.
Rumor has it that after the Chairman resigned late last week that two more HP officers will resign: the head of global security and, yes, the ethics officer. This is a textbook example of how the most important asset of a company — its reputation — can be devalued in the marketplace by its own people. It is shameful.
Rumor has it that after the Chairman resigned late last week that two more HP officers will resign: the head of global security and, yes, the ethics officer. This is a textbook example of how the most important asset of a company — its reputation — can be devalued in the marketplace by its own people. It is shameful.