Wednesday, October 24, 2007

Life Insurance for all overseas hires? Latte for me..

Domestic recruitment (yes, housemaids for those living a life of less luxury than many here in Arabia!) is not my special topic, but I have just noticed an interesting change to the scene which could have wider consequences to general expatriate hiring across the region.

 

My view today comes from Starbucks in Kuwait Airport. It’s a great spot and one of the most happening bucks, well worth a visit. A glimpse into Kuwaiti youth pastimes, you wouldn’t believe how many 20-something’s come here to get online and play network games whilst having a latte and a chat.

 

Anyhow – back to the point. The Ministry of Labor & Employment of the Philippines has passed a law that any person sponsoring domestic workers in Kuwait have to provide life insurance for them. So have the Ethiopian Government – and every body else is expected to follow suit.

 

According to AbdulAziz Al-Ali who is the Chairman of the Union of Domestic Workers – the policy will only cost $50 a year so it’s hardly providing great coverage, sounds to me as though it’s a basic policy to cover events if a foreign worker sadly dies when overseas. This would seems to make sense as employers are already required to enroll domestic workers in government health programs so that medical care is provided for staff. Also end of service flights to repatriate workers are also a labor requirement.

 

So whilst it’s quite a morbid or sad story, it’s clearly a good thing to have in place. My interest in the story was that it might easily break out of the ‘domestic worker’ category and into professional expatriate hires. My life policy costs me $800 a year, so the cost to major national employers could be quite a hit.

 

Going to get mango frappucino..

Monday, October 01, 2007

Gap Job Applicants' Data Stolen - 800,000 of them!

Gap Job Applicants' Data Stolen - 800,000 of them!
 
A thief stole a laptop computer containing unencrypted personal information of 800,000 people who applied for jobs at Gap Inc., the clothing retailer announced Friday.
 
The laptop stored Social Security numbers and other data from people in the U.S., Puerto Rico and Canada who applied online and by phone between July 2006 and June 2007 for jobs at Gap, Old Navy, Banana Republic and Outlet stores.
 
This news comes hot on the heals of a security breach last month where online job site Monster.com exposed the confidential information of 1.3 million people looking for jobs.
 
Gap said the laptop was lifted from the offices of a third-party vendor that manages job applicant data for the San Francisco-based clothier. If you look at the link of the GAP career portal which is run by Taleo, there are still jobs published although the CEO of Gap is rightly taking this breach of security very seriously.
 
 
Storing data without encrypting it to protect it from hackers is contrary to Gap's agreement with the third-party vendor, Gap said Friday.
 
"What happened here is against everything we stand for as a company," said Gap Chairman and CEO Glenn Murphy. "We're reviewing the facts and circumstances that led to this incident closely, and will take appropriate steps to help prevent something like this from happening again."
 
Ouch - are your privacy policies strong enough, are those of your recruitment system vendors? This is serious business folks, please be careful. I'm not sure if Gap or the vendor will get sued, but this could get very messy if jobseekers start reporting fraud activity as a result of their stolen data. Job applicant data, especially in the US where it often includes social security ID numbers as Gap's did, is very highly targeted by hackers.