| burninmylight said: Watch the video again, and show me the part where he shows his business card to the rest of the customers, or gives out any of his PERSONAL information to them. You're so caught up on the part where he says "Public" information to the manager. Wow, he uses the wrong word in a moment of frustration... It doesn't change a damn thing. It is his PERSONAL information that he gave to an employee at a business with the understanding that it would be kept PRIVATE. She violated that trust. Is that such a hard concept to understand? I work in a public library. I deal with customer records and private information every day. People hand over applications to me every day, along with driver's licenses, state ID cards, and various ways to proof their address (apartment leases, car insurance, check stubs, etc.). I have access to a million different names with phone numbers, addresses, emails and birth dates. By your logic, I'm allowed to then diverge that information with anyone I damn well please because a customer willingly gave it to me, even though it was given to me with the understanding that it would be kept private. If a sexy lady walks in, I can give a guy her name and number if I see him checking her out. If you piss me off, I can give my buddies your name and address to go give you shit at home. I could take your email to stalk you online on your various social networks. It sounds to me like none of that would be wrong to you, but yet you're the same guy who said, "Would you want a lunatic with your first and last name?". Do you not see the contradiction in your logic? You're saying it's OK for her to be giving out his personal information, but when he demanded her full name, he's the one crossing a line. As far as whether she's required to give her name as the store manager, I'll have a better idea tomorrow when I ask my boss the policy concerning privacy for store managers. |
Yes, that info does get passed around without your permission. Or.... do you think you get credit card offers from what exactly? Secondly, you know what the point of a business card is right? You can't complain that your information that you put on a business card that you gave out became public. There is a complete difference between application (depending on the type of application. Your information will be passed out for credit card apps or store card apps... or hell even scholarship apps) and handing out your business card
I can tell you with 100% certainty you don't need to give out more than your first name and position in the company. I was a manager at little caesars and delt with complaints all the time. "I wanted a fresh pizza made personally 2 minutes before the store closed. This is unacceptable"







