But corporations work different. Often it is not about logic and facts. I have often seen managers making a mountain out of a molehill. More than once I had the impression they were doing it to underline their own importance and prove the reason for their existence (while they were just parasites) . And they focused on the particular subject, because it was the only one they thought they understood (but didn't).
I have cracking story about that...
1998:
I worked on the worlds best towed array seismic streamer. It's design and performance was all secret and we were all under NDA's not to reveal any info on the product etc.
It's a product that you can get a good idea of it's performance by simply looking at photos and things, especially the module that contained the hydrophones.
Well, the product was a big success and a huge export earner, and management entered it into the Australian Design Awards. They submitted photos, and all sorts of detailed tech info to the judges. We won, and the design and photos and info were published widely everywhere, and management were all chuffed.
http://www.gooddesignaustralia.com/awards/past/entry/slim-line-towed-array/?year=1998(photos and story now missing it seems)
We still made contractors sign the NDA etc, and one day a new contractor phoned up management and went "WTF, I searched the internet and found this employee called Dave Jones who has all this technical information and detailed photos of the streamer plasted on his website. How can he do that and you tell me I'll be shot if tell anyone?"
When I came into work the next day there were a bunch of fuming management suits hauling my arse into a room.
I had to try and explain to them how I hadn't posted anything, I simply was proud that we had won the design award and linked to the public info on the design award website. It wasn't me who released this info, its was them!
Needed to say, this wasn't easy, as it was 1998, and not everyone understood how the internet worked.
They demanded that
I remove all the information instantly.
Hmm, yeah, that took some explaining to try and convince them it wasn't my information, I didn't have access to the design award website, blah, blah.
But eventually understood I couldn't do that, but still ordered me to remove the link from my website, as if that would magically make the problem disappear. And it did because the contrator with his piss poor web skills couldn't find the website any more and reported as such.
They patted themselves on the back for the coverup of the info leak.
