How did your boss know that you "hacked the network"?
Trying to score yourself an advantage in an interview is not "going above and beyond". You didn't do it to benefit the company, you did it to benefit YOURSELF. You could have talked to someone in IT, or asked permission before you did it. You chose not to.
Their argument was "you were in an unauthorized area on the computer, therefore it doesn't matter what commands you entered"
I certainly wouldn't post on a public forum if I were considering involving legal counsel about it.
UNLESS you are IT you never mess with the command propt. there is no reason to do it.
HR and such are idiots and have no clue that /ipconfig is. all they see is a lot of numbers scroll by.
they take this as you are either installing software, hacking, or worse.
never a good idea.
also as six mentioned this was not "above and beyond" for his job and in no way would have helped him in a interview
I bet you checked ATOT from work? GLHF!
I have gone above and beyond many times in the past. Repaired machines, troubleshooting software and displays, etc. According to HR, this would also be "outside of my job description and tampering with equipment"
sue first ask questions later.
and find out where it says cmd prompt = unauthorized area
Exactly. If it was truly unauthorized more than likely IT could have easily disabled/locked out the ability to run a cmd prompt from non-authorized workstations.
And they'd be right. Helping someone else get their work done IS going above and beyond. In this case, your use of the command prompt was for YOUR benefit ONLY. You were snooping in a work area that you had no legitimate business purpose to be in. It's no different than if you were snooping in your boss's desk.
really? wow, that's some comparison.
And they'd be right. Helping someone else get their work done IS going above and beyond. In this case, your use of the command prompt was for YOUR benefit ONLY. You were snooping in a work area that you had no legitimate business purpose to be in. It's no different than if you were snooping in your boss's desk.
Exactly. If it was truly unauthorized more than likely IT could have easily disabled/locked out the ability to run a cmd prompt from non-authorized workstations.
how I solved that problem
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Saying that i understand how the network is set up, and have worked with all of the associated hardware and camera equipment in the past would not help my case?
with HR that is doing the hireing? not really.
talk with IT latter and ask questions shrug. while w hat you did was minor you should never mess with the command prompt at work. HR are idiots and management even worse.
What.
This doesn't make logical sense.
This is an unlocked area of the machine. It would be akin to looking at what is hung on the walls in the bosses office.
Long story short, my supervisor (whom had also put in for the position, and was far less qualified, he didnt even know how to install a wireless router in his home) turned me for "hacking the network".
Is this wrongful termination? I don't know how the law works.
Yes. Unauthorized use of company property.So any person who checks the weather or traffic on a company computer can potentially be fired?
