• Dharma Curious@startrek.website
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    1 year ago

    Worked security at a factory that made kitchen appliances. It wasn’t his first day, but it was his first shift by himself.

    There’s a gate at the front that you lock when you go on rounds.

    Dude chooses to go on a round 5 minutes before shift change for the factory workers. He gets a call on company cell that folks are at the gate. Instead of coming back, he tells them to wait 20 minutes so he can finish his round.

    20 minutes where they won’t be getting paid.

    Second in command big boss of the factory is out there checking IDs and directing traffic when dude gets back from his round. Now this dude is nice. Genuinely one of the nicest people you’ll ever meet. Old union rep, shirt off his back type. Tells guard not to worry about it, all’s good. Just time his rounds better next time.

    Guard starts screaming at him about how he had no right to undo the lock, to get out of here, he’ll handle them, and if he wants to make them wait that’s his right. Boss man tells him to chill out, he won’t get in trouble, just go do his log and then he can take over checking IDs.

    Guard pulls out, in one hand, a mag light flashlight he was told not to have, and in the other chemical spray that’s illegal for a guard to carry without certs (which he didn’t have), and this is an unarmed site. Threatens to ““arrest”” him. When boss pulls out his cell to call the guard company, the guard sprayed him and knocked his cell onto the ground, and kicked it across the parking lot, breaking it.

    Needless to say, he was fired. Boss didn’t press assault charges, but we nearly lost the contract.

      • Evkob@lemmy.ca
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        1 year ago

        I can’t imagine why, he sounds like exactly the type of person police departments go for.

        • Throwaway@lemm.ee
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          1 year ago

          Nah, the police understand who is and isn’t a target. That guy didn’t have that.

  • railsdev@programming.dev
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    1 year ago

    No one got fired but my favorite story similar to this is from back when I worked in fast food (McDonald’s).

    We had someone on their first day scoff when asked to roll breakfast burritos.

    Toward the end of their shift she was asked to wash dishes and at that point she took off her apron, threw it on the floor and walked out saying things like “I can’t believe they have me doing stuff like this.”

    Really? You can’t imagine preparing food and washing dishes in a fast food restaurant?

    • MrBusiness@lemmy.zip
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      1 year ago

      Tbf when I worked at BK they told me everything I would be doing as a line cook. When I started my shift the first thing the supervisor told me to do was clean the washrooms. I told them no, I was hired as a line cook and no one told me about washrooms. So the supe says I can clean them or he’ll get the manager involved and I’ll probably be fired. I said sure call him. Supe comes back and tells me to start in the kitchen. Turned out line cooks were not supposed to be cleaning washrooms and the manager came in the next day to explain everyone’s duties.

      But later turned out that supe was going out with one of the cashiers.

      • railsdev@programming.dev
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        1 year ago

        I worked at a BK too as a shift manager and that place was a zoo. Now whenever I go to a BK I notice the same problems: severely understaffed, manager stuck working multiple “team” positions, etc. BK sucks; their entire operations are light years away from where McDonald’s was at.

        Not to say one or the other has better food. McDonald’s is faster and more efficient because they limit the amount of prep necessary, but a FRESH Whopper tastes much better than anything McDonald’s sells (IMO).

    • Tathas@programming.dev
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      1 year ago

      When I worked at a movie theater, I was showing a new hire how to prepare pretzels. After I sprayed a little mist on them and was dribbling some salt over them, he said something along the lines of, “Man this is too much,” took his vest off, and went to find a manager to hand it to.

  • Xianshi@lemm.ee
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    1 year ago

    One guy during the probation period called IT saying his laptop was broke, they told him to bring it into the office. It turned out he was on another continent and didn’t bother to tell anyone. As expected he lost his job.

    • P1r4nha@feddit.de
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      1 year ago

      Had the same thing happen. They found out he logged into the company VPN from China.

      • railsdev@programming.dev
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        1 year ago

        I recently went on a short trip for my wife’s surgery just over the border and did work one day remotely from another country. I used a travel router connected to the hotel WiFi but that router was running a Wireguard tunnel back to my apartment. From there I connected my work laptop to its WiFi so all the traffic out to the Internet appeared to come from home. When I connected to the company VPN on the work laptop it should’ve appeared as though I was connecting from my home country, right?

        I’m pretty solid that that’s the case. I confirmed on all my other devices connected to the travel router that there were no DNS/IP leaks.

        Just curious if you have anything to add.

        • ElderWendigo@sh.itjust.works
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          1 year ago

          Probably, but that’s not the issue from a corporate perspective. You still transported a company laptop, presumably containing company IP or other confidential information, across an international border. That’s the big sticking point with most corporations due to the rules about search and seizure of said data when crossing borders. Some companies might insist that only prepared clean (essentially empty, not just encrypted) machines can cross borders and you can download the data you need through a VPN once you reach your destination.