If you are applying for a job DON'T do this...

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joesmoke

Diamond Member
Nov 2, 2007
5,420
2
0
Originally posted by: badkarma1399
If I write ATOT member on my resume, do I get preferential treatment?

yes... you'll get the SBS stamp on your application
 

spidey07

No Lifer
Aug 4, 2000
65,469
5
76
Originally posted by: StinkyPinky
In other words, they suck and should die a horrible death like other obsolete junk like floppy disks

Have you ever had to sign multi-million dollar contracts and have legal departments on both sides involved? I work in the networking/security/telecomm business and these contracts are pretty big in terms of commitments, on both sides.

NEVER has an e-mail been acceptable for final signing. Hand signed and delivered or fax. Same with employment, specifically gubment. It has to be legally binding with no "outs".

-edit-
To add - if you don't see the power of the fax then you haven't been in business. It carries much more weight than an E-mail. Mailed documents carry even more weight.
 

Vette73

Lifer
Jul 5, 2000
21,503
9
0
Originally posted by: StinkyPinky
Can someone explain to me what a fax can do that an email cannot? A fax simply sends a document to another fax machine by sending it over a phoneline.

Sure an email is only a soft copy, but a quick print makes it a hard copy if you need to do so.

The disadvantages of faxes over email

1 - Less secure since personal info can sit in a fax tray for hours ( a big problem)
2 - Requires a phoneline, so extra cost.
3 - They require toner and servicing
4 - Is only peer to peer (i think?). Email can be sent to multiple people
5 - Creates a hard copy which needs to be filed somewhere
6 - Way less reliable. Some faxes just don't work with each other.


In other words, they suck and should die a horrible death like other obsolete junk like floppy disks


As pointed out by a few here they are easy to track, simple to use, and also a big one very legal (Stand up in court).

"faxes just don't work with each other" ??? You are doing it. Faxs have a basic standard, it is meant so they all work together.



Being this is for Fed Gov jobs the legal part is big. We have people file complaints all the time.
1 time a idiot clicked the NO box to the question, are you a US Citizen. When he did not make the CERT he filed a complaint. Or someone that filed a complaint as they did not make the CERT after applying to a job that was for current State Dept employees only and clicked the box that said NO I am not a current... and so on.

As you saw above. Someone was complaining about how long some applications are. Again someone sued and this was out legal way out of their complaint.

We have to follow the law and court order, that is why our instructions are VERY clear and we usually instruct them twice and even in bold red lettering for some instructions.
 

IamElectro

Golden Member
Jul 15, 2003
1,470
0
76
Originally posted by: StinkyPinky
Can someone explain to me what a fax can do that an email cannot? A fax simply sends a document to another fax machine by sending it over a phoneline.

Sure an email is only a soft copy, but a quick print makes it a hard copy if you need to do so.

The disadvantages of faxes over email

1 - Less secure since personal info can sit in a fax tray for hours ( a big problem)
2 - Requires a phoneline, so extra cost.
3 - They require toner and servicing
4 - Is only peer to peer (i think?). Email can be sent to multiple people
5 - Creates a hard copy which needs to be filed somewhere
6 - Way less reliable. Some faxes just don't work with each other.


In other words, they suck and should die a horrible death like other obsolete junk like floppy disks

The disadvantages of email over faxes in the business world.

1. More secure than email as email can be hacked, headers changed, someone in the office leaves the email client opened on the computer. In other words there is a paper trail.
2. So what when your dealing in the millions 50 bucks is nothing.
3. Your email account has an admin that cost more than a toner cartridge.
4. Your fax goes exactly where you want provided they supply the correct number.
5. Legal document that stands up in court.
6. Fax machines all work on the same standard.
 

DrPizza

Administrator Elite Member Goat Whisperer
Mar 5, 2001
49,601
167
111
www.slatebrookfarm.com
Originally posted by: millerlight789
To be complaining about all these people you should learn how to type, and also insert an in front of a vowel not a.

Why stop there? The difference between then/than, the difference between there/their... But he said that his was an entry level position, so give him a break. i.e. he's just a peon within government bureaucracy with an over-inflated sense of importance. He gets to belittle people who ask a simple question that would be answered much differently outside his archaic, inefficient system.

Sadly though, reading this thread gave me perfect understanding of why our government agencies are often very inefficient.
 

jagec

Lifer
Apr 30, 2004
24,442
6
81
Originally posted by: StinkyPinky
The disadvantages of faxes over email

1 - Less secure since personal info can sit in a fax tray for hours ( a big problem)
2 - Requires a phoneline, so extra cost.
3 - They require toner and servicing
4 - Is only peer to peer (i think?). Email can be sent to multiple people
5 - Creates a hard copy which needs to be filed somewhere
6 - Way less reliable. Some faxes just don't work with each other.


In other words, they suck and should die a horrible death like other obsolete junk like floppy disks

From a business point of view:

1 - MORE secure, since you don't have to worry about idiots with spyware-infested computers leaking the information all over the web. The only people who see a fax are YOUR employees.
2 - Yeah, you already have dozens of phone lines. You're a business. :confused:
3 - Computers require a full-time IT guy and constant repairs
4 - I'm almost positive our fax machine allows you to fax multiple people. Not sure if it's simultaneous, since I haven't used it.
5 - Hard copies are an advantage in business. Plus, unlike hard copies from email, faxes don't give you pages of ads, headers, and other superfluous information that your secretary doesn't know how to remove from an email printout
6 - Much more reliable. Your fax machine doesn't get viruses, doesn't crash, doesn't require IT support, doesn't have file incompatibility issues, and I don't know where you got the crazy idea that some faxes "just don't work with each other". If anything this is much more of a problem with computers -- Hello Apple and PC!

Businesses will use faxes for decades to come, but yes, they are annoying for regular people who can use computers. Maybe that's why computers can send faxes these days.;)
 

Uhtrinity

Platinum Member
Dec 21, 2003
2,263
202
106
Originally posted by: Aimster
I have a question for you OP.

Does a D count for accounting credit in a class? Will my employer see my transcript or just my resume?

I assume it won't count if it is directly related to the field you are applying for. Last fall I went through an interview with a government agency and took some flack for roughly 2 semesters that had some poor grades (out of 200+ credits). It made for a tense interview on my part, but I still got an offer.
 

DrPizza

Administrator Elite Member Goat Whisperer
Mar 5, 2001
49,601
167
111
www.slatebrookfarm.com
Originally posted by: Marlin1975
Originally posted by: Xavier434
Originally posted by: Marlin1975
facepalm.

What part of...

"You may fax your resume and all required documents to (478) 757-3144. If you submit the supporting documents via fax, you MUST include the official fax cover sheet found at the following link..."

is so hard to understand. It list what options there are. You don;t get to make them up because you got your way in school/home/etc...
If you can't understand that then you really think I am going to try and get you into a high up TopSecret level job?

And this is Fed Gov. Everything is written in stone, its the LAW!!! Our rules and regulations are law. We don;t get to change or bend them. We cant't hire the person we want if 3 others did better on the application and so on.

Have you ever been given a set of instructions, asked those in charge if you could do it a different way that is easier for you, and they said something to the effect of, "Oh ya sure. That's perfectly fine."?

That is why they called and asked. There is nothing they did not understand about your instructions. They were simply trying to make things easier. That is not a bad sign of someone's character or ability. That is a good sign. You want people to try and make things better by thinking outside of the box.


NO!!! WHAT PART OF OUR RULES ARE LAW DO YOU NOT GET??? People have been removed from their jobs 6+ months later as they were not hired correct, i.e. legal. I had a posting of mine removed as they did not like a couple things. I had to rebuild it to fix a couple words and 1 sheet.


And yes they are being childish idiots. With so many kids being treated with paper gloves today, no red ink billys feelings will get hurt. Or we don;t use letter grades anymore, etc... i see idiots all the time thinking they can have it there way as they always get their way.
This is the real world, you don;t get it your way. Esp with the Gov.

You really have an over-inflated sense of importance. The last time I was hired, the conversation on the phone went like this. "Could you fax over your transcripts?" "Well, I don't have a fax machine at my house, because I don't have a land line. I only have a cell phone. But I could drive over to Staples and send it, that'd be no problem at all. Or, if you like, since you're only 10 minutes further away than Staples, I could just run it over to you myself. If you'd like to view it immediately, I could send you a scanned version of all these documents." "Oh, you have a scanner? Just attach it in an email to <recipient>. That would be just fine. I wouldn't need a faxed version."

My email: "Here are my transcripts. I didn't know what software you would use to view it, so I prepared an RTF version as well as a pdf version."

Government version:
You stamping your feet on the floor, having a temper tantrum. "No no no no. You must send it to me by fax. Those are the government rules, don't you know anything. You are a moron. You are obviously unqualified. I want a fax. And, I want an oompa loompa. Get me an oompa loompa. <stomp stomp stomp stomp>"
 

Babbles

Diamond Member
Jan 4, 2001
8,253
14
81
Originally posted by: millerlight789
To be complaining about all these people you should learn how to type, and also insert an in front of a vowel not a.

As a FYI, spelling and grammar nazis are the suck. Especially so when their grammar is lacking.
 

StinkyPinky

Diamond Member
Jul 6, 2002
6,976
1,276
126
Originally posted by: spidey07
Originally posted by: StinkyPinky
In other words, they suck and should die a horrible death like other obsolete junk like floppy disks

Have you ever had to sign multi-million dollar contracts and have legal departments on both sides involved? I work in the networking/security/telecomm business and these contracts are pretty big in terms of commitments, on both sides.

NEVER has an e-mail been acceptable for final signing. Hand signed and delivered or fax. Same with employment, specifically gubment. It has to be legally binding with no "outs".

-edit-
To add - if you don't see the power of the fax then you haven't been in business. It carries much more weight than an E-mail. Mailed documents carry even more weight.

I'm not disputing that faxes have more legal meaning than email. The question I'm asking is why?? The answer, imo, is because of their age. THey've been around for 30 years. Give it another 10 years and imo emails will have similar legal power than faxes. Old fart politicians are always slow to change.

Anyway, really serious legal stuff should be either done in person or at least over snail mail. If you're doing 50 million dollar stuff over fax that's just flat out strange.

And to the people above, I can't say I agree that fax is more secure than email. Any half decent business is going to have firewalls and anti-virus to prevent spoofing, hacking etc. Having a confidential fax sitting in the tray for hours, or sitting in the buffer because there's no paper is not exactly secure.
 

Capt Caveman

Lifer
Jan 30, 2005
34,543
651
126
Originally posted by: StinkyPinky
Originally posted by: spidey07
Originally posted by: StinkyPinky
In other words, they suck and should die a horrible death like other obsolete junk like floppy disks

Have you ever had to sign multi-million dollar contracts and have legal departments on both sides involved? I work in the networking/security/telecomm business and these contracts are pretty big in terms of commitments, on both sides.

NEVER has an e-mail been acceptable for final signing. Hand signed and delivered or fax. Same with employment, specifically gubment. It has to be legally binding with no "outs".

-edit-
To add - if you don't see the power of the fax then you haven't been in business. It carries much more weight than an E-mail. Mailed documents carry even more weight.

I'm not disputing that faxes have more legal meaning than email. The question I'm asking is why?? The answer, imo, is because of their age. THey've been around for 30 years. Give it another 10 years and imo emails will have similar legal power than faxes. Old fart politicians are always slow to change.

Anyway, really serious legal stuff should be either done in person or at least over snail mail. If you're doing 50 million dollar stuff over fax that's just flat out strange.

And to the people above, I can't say I agree that fax is more secure than email. Any half decent business is going to have firewalls and anti-virus to prevent spoofing, hacking etc. Having a confidential fax sitting in the tray for hours, or sitting in the buffer because there's no paper is not exactly secure.

You don't work in a legal, government or corporate environment? You know there are fax machines that receive faxes electronically and scan them, so you don't have to deal with paper. A phone line is much more secure than network connection. Ever hear a company's fax line getting hacked? It will be a lot longer than 10 years before you see fax going away.

And $50 million deals? For large corporations, that's not a lot of money and the faxing of legal papers, purchase order, etc happens routinely.
 

Babbles

Diamond Member
Jan 4, 2001
8,253
14
81
Originally posted by: StinkyPinky
Originally posted by: spidey07
Originally posted by: StinkyPinky
In other words, they suck and should die a horrible death like other obsolete junk like floppy disks

Have you ever had to sign multi-million dollar contracts and have legal departments on both sides involved? I work in the networking/security/telecomm business and these contracts are pretty big in terms of commitments, on both sides.

NEVER has an e-mail been acceptable for final signing. Hand signed and delivered or fax. Same with employment, specifically gubment. It has to be legally binding with no "outs".

-edit-
To add - if you don't see the power of the fax then you haven't been in business. It carries much more weight than an E-mail. Mailed documents carry even more weight.

I'm not disputing that faxes have more legal meaning than email. The question I'm asking is why?? The answer, imo, is because of their age. THey've been around for 30 years. Give it another 10 years and imo emails will have similar legal power than faxes. Old fart politicians are always slow to change.

Anyway, really serious legal stuff should be either done in person or at least over snail mail. If you're doing 50 million dollar stuff over fax that's just flat out strange.

And to the people above, I can't say I agree that fax is more secure than email. Any half decent business is going to have firewalls and anti-virus to prevent spoofing, hacking etc. Having a confidential fax sitting in the tray for hours, or sitting in the buffer because there's no paper is not exactly secure.

It matters not if you say it is or isn't. It is and that is all that matters.

As spidey07 said, if you have not seen the importance and value of a fax then you really have not worked much in the world of business.

 

StinkyPinky

Diamond Member
Jul 6, 2002
6,976
1,276
126
Originally posted by: Babbles
Originally posted by: StinkyPinky
Originally posted by: spidey07
Originally posted by: StinkyPinky
In other words, they suck and should die a horrible death like other obsolete junk like floppy disks

Have you ever had to sign multi-million dollar contracts and have legal departments on both sides involved? I work in the networking/security/telecomm business and these contracts are pretty big in terms of commitments, on both sides.

NEVER has an e-mail been acceptable for final signing. Hand signed and delivered or fax. Same with employment, specifically gubment. It has to be legally binding with no "outs".

-edit-
To add - if you don't see the power of the fax then you haven't been in business. It carries much more weight than an E-mail. Mailed documents carry even more weight.

I'm not disputing that faxes have more legal meaning than email. The question I'm asking is why?? The answer, imo, is because of their age. THey've been around for 30 years. Give it another 10 years and imo emails will have similar legal power than faxes. Old fart politicians are always slow to change.

Anyway, really serious legal stuff should be either done in person or at least over snail mail. If you're doing 50 million dollar stuff over fax that's just flat out strange.

And to the people above, I can't say I agree that fax is more secure than email. Any half decent business is going to have firewalls and anti-virus to prevent spoofing, hacking etc. Having a confidential fax sitting in the tray for hours, or sitting in the buffer because there's no paper is not exactly secure.

It matters not if you say it is or isn't. It is and that is all that matters.

As spidey07 said, if you have not seen the importance and value of a fax then you really have not worked much in the world of business.

Still can't grasp it. How is it more secure? A phone line is extremely easy to hack, the reason you don't have about it is email is used far more often.

To be honest, I'm surprised faxes are considered legal documents and I suspect it's more to do with convienience than security. Shit, I can go to our office fax, change its settings, and make it look like it came from anywhere in the world. How is that secure?

Just out of interest, are you guys Network Engineers? Dunno about your setup, but I can route a fax anywhere I want.

 

DrPizza

Administrator Elite Member Goat Whisperer
Mar 5, 2001
49,601
167
111
www.slatebrookfarm.com
I agree wholeheartedly that fax is more secure. But, look at the situation. You're on the phone with someone, talking to them. And, they say, "I'll send it to you as an email attachment, you'll have it in 20 seconds." What's "unsecure" about that?? Where is there any compromise in security? You can have the attachment in front of you without even disconnecting from the phone call. I can't even count the number of times I've conducted business this way with people.

"Okay, I just sent it; it should be in your inbox in a moment." "Here, let me refresh. Okay, I've got it. Hang on a second. Okay, everything looks fine. Thank you." "You're welcome."
 

Red Squirrel

No Lifer
May 24, 2003
70,560
13,801
126
www.anyf.ca
Fax? Why do so many companies insist on using such old technology? The whole "paper record" thing is BS, considering it can be forged just as easily as email.

Domain registrars are bad for that too, like network solutions wants a domain owner to fax this form just to get an authentication code. wtf is that about?

Whenver I get a ticket stating fax is not working I feel like putting in the solution "use email" and close the ticket.
 

spidey07

No Lifer
Aug 4, 2000
65,469
5
76
Originally posted by: StinkyPinky

Still can't grasp it. How is it more secure? A phone line is extremely easy to hack, the reason you don't have about it is email is used far more often.

To be honest, I'm surprised faxes are considered legal documents and I suspect it's more to do with convienience than security. Shit, I can go to our office fax, change its settings, and make it look like it came from anywhere in the world. How is that secure?

Just out of interest, are you guys Network Engineers? Dunno about your setup, but I can route a fax anywhere I want.

Hi. Network security architect speaking. Call detail records from the sender and receiver (switch records that are stored and most times printed out for a paper record) would show where it came from and caller ID is not something people use as identity, that's arbitrary and doesn't mean anything.

A FAX traverses PSTN be it packetized or not. It still adheres to the record keeping of the PSTN.
 

Red Squirrel

No Lifer
May 24, 2003
70,560
13,801
126
www.anyf.ca
Originally posted by: DrPizza
I agree wholeheartedly that fax is more secure. But, look at the situation. You're on the phone with someone, talking to them. And, they say, "I'll send it to you as an email attachment, you'll have it in 20 seconds." What's "unsecure" about that?? Where is there any compromise in security? You can have the attachment in front of you without even disconnecting from the phone call. I can't even count the number of times I've conducted business this way with people.

"Okay, I just sent it; it should be in your inbox in a moment." "Here, let me refresh. Okay, I've got it. Hang on a second. Okay, everything looks fine. Thank you." "You're welcome."

Pretty much, and fax is also sent over unencrypted channels. Email goes through all sorts of mediums through high secure facilities, making it rather unlikely that someone can tap into it. The odds of this are very slim (same with fax, mind you).

In a way fax is actually worse, as the copy is in more places:

- computer
- possibly been sent through email (ex: user did it at home and emailed at work to fax it)
- fax machine at both ends (now there's 2 copies)
- garbage/recycling

 

Babbles

Diamond Member
Jan 4, 2001
8,253
14
81
Originally posted by: RedSquirrel
Originally posted by: DrPizza
I agree wholeheartedly that fax is more secure. But, look at the situation. You're on the phone with someone, talking to them. And, they say, "I'll send it to you as an email attachment, you'll have it in 20 seconds." What's "unsecure" about that?? Where is there any compromise in security? You can have the attachment in front of you without even disconnecting from the phone call. I can't even count the number of times I've conducted business this way with people.

"Okay, I just sent it; it should be in your inbox in a moment." "Here, let me refresh. Okay, I've got it. Hang on a second. Okay, everything looks fine. Thank you." "You're welcome."

Pretty much, and fax is also sent over unencrypted channels. Email goes through all sorts of mediums through high secure facilities, making it rather unlikely that someone can tap into it. The odds of this are very slim (same with fax, mind you).

In a way fax is actually worse, as the copy is in more places:

- computer
- possibly been sent through email (ex: user did it at home and emailed at work to fax it)
- fax machine at both ends (now there's 2 copies)
- garbage/recycling

You can think you whatever you may wish, but I promise you billion dollar corporations rely on faxes because they are secure.

I worked in the pharmaceutical research industry. While email is indeed used for the vast majority of correspondence when it came to signing legal documents and/or transmitting sensitive information faxes are the norm. Not 100% of the time, but in my experiences more often than not. Hell sometimes we even burned data on a CD and mailed it. Sounds bizarre, but if somebody got a hold of that data via the mail . . . well postal fraud is a major crime and if it was intercepted it would be physically missing or otherwise there would be evidence of tampering. People can sniff email with the sender and recipient being none the wiser.

I think companies would prefer to use email, but the security is just not there.

Additionally in my experience with pharmaceutical research we have to follow certain FDA guidelines, which are effectively codified as law in the Code of Federal Regulations (CFR) and electronic data is regulated under 21 CFR Part 11. In fact making "Part 11" compliant systems is a major deal.

 

Red Squirrel

No Lifer
May 24, 2003
70,560
13,801
126
www.anyf.ca
It's sad that companies still want to rely on super old crummy technology. There are plenty of ways to secure email such as SSL (if both partys just log to same server) or PGP style encryption.
 

91TTZ

Lifer
Jan 31, 2005
14,374
1
0
Originally posted by: Xavier434

So basically a guy got removed from there Federal Government job when they technically did nothing wrong regardless of how efficient they actually were. Great. I thought the idea here was to keep the good ones and fire the crap?

Have you seen the financial state that our country is in right now? Does it surprise you?

Our government has become horribly inefficient. We need to cut out the dead wood, and it sounds like Marlin is part of it.
 

Muse

Lifer
Jul 11, 2001
40,871
10,222
136
Originally posted by: darkxshade
To be honest... who still faxes or has one for that matter these days, especially individuals looking for work? Asking to email does not sound unreasonable.
I can fax if I need to. It's the only reason I have long distance service. Rarely use it, but keep it for that reason.

 

Muse

Lifer
Jul 11, 2001
40,871
10,222
136
Originally posted by: Marlin1975
I do HR work for Fed Gov (State Dept). I have had about 20 e-mails and calls about 1 job posting I did. And I keep seeing the same thing.

Don?t be an idiot. When it says ?Note: All applicants MUST submit transcripts as verification of educational requirement.? Don?t contact me and ask ?do I really need to send in my transcripts??. Especially when you have no ?specialized experience?.
Or ?can I just e-mail these to you? when it says it has to be faxed in with a special cover sheet.
You know if you are having a hard time just following a basic job application at a monster.com type site then why would I want you?

And one that really gets to me is don?t be a ass. If you call me asking a dumb question and I take to time to read word for word from the announcement on what to do, don?t be a ass about it. Not only is the Technical assistance contact info written twice, but it is bold and in red.
We had 1 person for another job that was rude and contacted everybody, including my boss, because he did not make the job cert. Well the selecting official heard about it and needless to say was quite displeased with him for acting like that. This also was for a GS-14 (very high level in Gov) supervisory job. He was not chosen for that job.



Cliffs.
1. Don?t be a idiot
2. Don?t be a ass
Never looked at the whole job hunting scene from this point of view but I can understand your frustration. I'd feel the same way.
 

Muse

Lifer
Jul 11, 2001
40,871
10,222
136
Originally posted by: Jeff7181
Originally posted by: SarcasticDwarf
Joy of employers having f*cking stupid requirements and acting like it is the 14th century.

Bingo... who uses a fax machine anymore? What is this, 1990?
Are you joking? Fax is a pretty secure way of transmitting info electronically. Email generally is not, that's my take on this.

 

Red Squirrel

No Lifer
May 24, 2003
70,560
13,801
126
www.anyf.ca
How is fax more secure? It's sent unencrypted the same way email is. All someone needs to do is hookup a fax machine to any taped line and get the fax (with possibly other equipment involved, but easier then taping through fiber - ethernet within the building is rarely accessible and exits as fiber).
 

TruePaige

Diamond Member
Oct 22, 2006
9,874
2
0
Wow. Where to begin. . .

First, for someone who is so intent on everything being perfect, you spelled conservative wrong in your signature (even though it's shown multiple time in the image you link to) and your excerpt from your posting didn't use the word MUST so it isn't really odd to ask the question.

Also, I have worked in the government sector and sent many a piece of grant paperwork via e-mail.

Fax is ridiculous, I just use e-fax for people who are unwilling to be reasonable.

On my last job I just e-mailed the documents to HR, they printed them off and filed them away, same with my student loan request.