I find it very odd....who would care if someone in your company spoke with the media? What would they have to say that might be detrimental anyway? Mmm....I wouldn't even be thinking along these lines, especially early on.
I find it very odd....who would care if someone in your company spoke with the media? What would they have to say that might be detrimental anyway? Mmm....I wouldn't even be thinking along these lines, especially early on.
I find it very odd....who would care if someone in your company spoke with the media? What would they have to say that might be detrimental anyway? Mmm....I wouldn't even be thinking along these lines, especially early on.
I think that due to the nature of Intel's business.. Everyone is used to following strict rules within the company and all the security they have in place in all locations it is part of the working environment.
(You just cannot get/walk into an Intel site)
From Intel's Code of Conduct
http://www.intel.com/assets/PDF/Policy/code-of-conduct.pdf
<snip>
We believe individuals have the right to decide when their personal data is collected, used, or disclosed.
later in paragraph
<snip>
When questions, issues, or concerns arise, consult Intel Legal or a member of the Privacy Team.
I'm more inclined to think he was just in "auto" mode, and approaching things logically. Emma says it better =)
you are awesome freefallzzzz. :blowkiss:
nothing like some actuals factuals to back up my intuition. :highfive:
I find it very odd....who would care if someone in your company spoke with the media? What would they have to say that might be detrimental anyway? Mmm....I wouldn't even be thinking along these lines, especially early on.
Let's just get the whole "privacy" part of Intels code of conduct in here....and it's talking about personal data (any information that can be used to identify, contact, or locate an individual. Somehow, I don't think this was what Kaine was talking about...........
http://www.intel.com/assets/PDF/Policy/code-of-conduct.pdf
Privacy
Many countries have implemented, or are planning to implement, privacy laws that set requirements for the appropriate handling of personal data ( any information that can be used to identify, contact, or locate an individual)
We are committed to protecting the reasonable privacy expectations of everyone we do business with, including our customers, consumers and employees. We believe individuals have the right to decide where there personal data is collected, used or disclosed. We also believe that responsible stewardship of personal data is a critical component in maintaining trust in the Intel brand and ensuring that individuals feel confident that Intel respects their right to privacy.
Therefore we each have a responsibility to comply with Intel privacy and information security requirements when personal data is collected, stored, processed, transmitted and saved.
When questions, issues, or concerns arise, consult Intel Legal or a member of the Privacy Team.
I find it very odd....who would care if someone in your company spoke with the media? What would they have to say that might be detrimental anyway? Mmm....I wouldn't even be thinking along these lines, especially early on.
What I find interesting about that email is it does say not to talk to media. But, it doesn't say tell LE anything you think might help. That has always struck me.
I found this email odd...a few questions, which may have been addressed before, if so I apologize (1) Who's Becky? (2) who orginally generated the email? (3) how would this email as it looks here be going out to his Intel Group? (4) was this an actual email or something posted on Acker's website ? (5) He's honcho enough to contact Intel's legal ??? (6) lastly, what I love, he did not politely ask anyone not to talk to the media, he specifically said DO NOT....oh, I just thought I was through...as an employer of over 100 people, if something like this occurred within my work force family here, any email correspndence to my employees would be from me.....jmo....
JMHO WARNING:
This is not to say Kaine is a bad guy. Everyone has their own personality style. Kaine's is just very visible and untempered due to a relatively low EQ.
The guy just doesn't bother me that much - I know lots of folks like this. Perfectly good folks who never have a clue when a loved one is suffering - until after the fact. At which point, they apply logic and sincerely try to analyze and mathematically solve what is an emotional problem.
((((hugs to all engineer-types, Kaine included))))
JMHO
Well maybe it's just me but I think it is just plan weird. Both Kaine and Terri seemed awfully worried about the media too early on for my taste.
I know, and I agree, it's kinda weird, but it's part of the high tech culture--secret-keeping, non-disclosure agreements, a very specific media strategy having to do with product release, specific people on staff to deal with the media. It's about controlling the market related to product releases and clients. These businesses see the media, and non-company people as outsiders as part of their work. The higher up in a tech business, the more paranoid about public information and the very precise roles of each person in a company. High tech is very paranoid because it's all about money and market position. Been there done that as a PR consultant to many high tech companies.
In Kaine's case it has to do with being part of that culture AND an attempt to protect his reputation. Although really, in my opinion, he's actually sort of chatty.
IMO
The email sounds fine to me. I work in a similar environment (science) and this email would be appropriate from a coworker facing a similar hardship. He's essentially saying the rumor (email) someone sent was factually correct, if you'd like to do something to help you can do X and Y but don't do Z, and here's all the information you need to identify him if you see him. He did have an emotional adjective - "amazing" - and so it wasn't completely cold.
My assumption is that Becky is a coworker who heard about missing Kyron and spread the word at Intel to inform, gather support for Kaine and explain his absence. And the request to not contact the media - well, the less that complicates matters the better in the early stages. Better that real leads are funneled through LE, the media gets more verified information after LE has already had time to digest/investigate it and there aren't eleven different stories floating around about Kyron being seen at Intel at some point weeks before that get mangled through media channels and report him found or some other communication snafu.
BBM
He did not request that they not contact the media...He said not to say anything if contacted by the media. I just wonder why he would automatically think that the media might contact a co-worker, especially in such a security-tight environment? I don't know....it just sounds strange to me.
Yes, Kaine is very chatty for someone who is accustomed to so much privacy. Thats why I find it unusual that he has shared so much, so often. He has shared things that I wouldn't want to talk about...such as his marriage, his wedding ring, his plans, etc. I think it odd to automatically tell everyone in your company to stay away from media questions and then hold open press conferences several times a week.