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While reviews, ratings, and salary information posted by users on Glassdoor have always been and will always be anonymous, Glassdoor Community is designed to provide users with a choice: to post ...
Glassdoor is an American website where current and former employees anonymously review companies, operated by the company of the same name. [1] In 2018, the company was acquired by the Japanese Recruit Holdings (Owner of Indeed ) for US$1.2 billion, and it continues to operate as an independent subsidiary.
The job review site Glassdoor, once popular for its honest, often piercing reviews of employers, might soon lose the anonymity that made it such a valuable tool for jobseekers.
Don't worry about it, Kristina. Once the review is published it won't show your full name. I've seen that happening with reviews I submit with my phone too. Your full name is there because, like me, you included it in your TripAdvisor Profile, and TripAdvisor is addressing you by your full name, but it won't post like that.
Content aggregator. Part of Glassdoor.com Internshala: India Students, recent graduates, internships Jobindex: Denmark General Content aggregator JobServe: U.S. and U.K. General JobStreet: Southeast Asia General Based in Malaysia JobTiger: Bulgaria General Kalibrr: Philippines and Indonesia General Kijiji: Canada and international General ...
1. Re: Anonymous Report? 6 years ago. Your report will be anonymous. All you are doing is alerting TripAdvisor to a review that you think might be breaching their guidelines. TA staffers will look at the review in question; if they do not consider that it breaches any guidelines they will leave it be. If they do, they will remove the review in ...
8. Re: Anonymous restaurant reviews - "A TripAdvisor Contributor". 15 years ago. there is a WONDERFUL restaurant in London - called Aubergine 16 reviews are from "A tripadvisor Contributor " most of them negative. My review is the only one with a "name ". Please tripadviser put this right - all we need is names -.
BugMeNot is an Internet service that provides usernames and passwords allowing Internet users to bypass mandatory free registration on websites.It was started in August 2003 by an anonymous person, later revealed to be Guy King, and allowed Internet users to access websites that have registration walls (for instance, that of The New York Times) with the requirement of compulsory registration.