|
A case of overlooked talent
Tens
of thousands - maybe even millions, if the rumors are to be believed -
of victims of the “panda burning incense” computer virus must have felt
a twinge of satisfaction when they learned that the author of the
digital scourge had been sentenced on Monday to four years behind bars.
However, we should also take time to set aside for a moment our sense
that justice has been done to think more deeply about the case.
A source with the procuratorate in Hubei Province, where Li Jun, the
criminal, was based, said millions of computer users must have been
victimized, though only 802 were recorded in the case, as many chose not
to report to the police.
From last November until March this year, the virus affected computers
in at least eight provinces and triggered panic across the country.
While hated by many, Li won the reputation as a “Net genius”.
After graduating from a vocational technical school in 2004, Li applied
to Internet companies in Beijing, Guangzhou and other cities for a job
in Net safety, but was turned down by all of them. “To vent his
grievance,” a Hubei newspaper reported, he wrote the virus and spread it
online.
His action is definitely worthy of our disgust. And there is little
doubt that his crime could never be justified by the fact that he had
failed to get a job. Still, his case deserves some thought. Why did the
Internet companies reject an application from someone who is clearly
some kind of computer prodigy? Obviously they did not recognize his
talent. But why? Shouldn’t the process of interviewing an applicant help
companies spot talented would-be-employees? The only possible
explanation I can think of is that Li Jun’s educational background was
not impressive enough to catch the eye of the companies’ human resource
managers.
Many employers face similar troubles when recruiting new workers.
Considering only applicants from “famous” universities while ignoring
those from less known ones is a common practice. This is unfair in terms
of an enterprise’s responsibility to society, and also reveals a certain
amount of ignorance on the part of human resource managers.
One irony of this case is that at least 10 companies have since
expressed a willingness to hire Li, some of them offering an annual
salary of 1 million yuan ($131,600). It seems that a talented job-seeker
can demonstrate his/her competence by making some unusual or even
unethical moves.
More absurd is the requirement among some employers that a person with a
master’s or doctoral degree from a prestigious university should also
have had his/her undergraduate education at a prestigious university. In
other words, a person who has finished postgraduate studies at a
well-known university will still be overlooked if he/she had the
misfortune of attending a less-than-famous university.
It is unclear to me whether such practices are the result of a sincere
belief among employers that an undergraduate education at a well-known
university is more important than anything else, or whether they think
China has so many university graduates that they can delight themselves
by playing pranks on the poor jobseekers.
It seems that we are saying “talent is the most important resource in
the 21st century” on the one hand, while setting obstacles in the way of
talented people on the other. Attend any job fair and one will find
discriminative criteria of all types: sex, age, school, work experience
and even place of birth.
To create a favorable social environment that will allow talented people
to develop scientific and technological innovations, we need to change
our erroneous ideas, both new and old, on how to make use of talent.
—The Daily Mail, China Daily news exchange item |