Should I warn a friend about a former employer?

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I have a friend who for the purposes of this question we'll refer to as Paul. Paul is a University professor who hasn't been actively involved in business outside of academia. He's shown me some very interesting algorithms he's developed with serious business applications. There are a few in particular that I think could make him significant money.



My former employer, who we'll call Bob, is not someone I'd work with again. I'm hesitant to disclose the details of why I don't trust Bob for fear of indirectly identifying him (or myself), but suffice it to say I believe my reasons are sound and not specific to my experiences with him. I would have serious concerns for anyone working with him.



Recently Bob began contracting with Paul and attempting to make some money off these ideas and algorithms. I'm not privy to the exact details of their situation, but I have a bad feeling that Bob may not have made everything fair. There may be nothing to worry about, but if my fears are correct Paul may be headed for a very bad situation.



On one hand, my friend is an adult and perfectly capable of making his own decisions. On the other hand, I would've greatly appreciated someone warning me what Bob was really like before I started working with him.



Should I warn my friend about Bob or leave it alone and mind my own business?







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  • 20




    He may be an adult perfectly capable of making his own decisions, but keep in mind that, like everyone else, he'd be a lot more capable of making good decisions when he has good information to base them off of.
    – Mason Wheeler
    Jul 24 '15 at 21:31






  • 31




    Why would you not do that? It's not as if you're spreading unfounded rumours, or making the decision for him.
    – tomasz
    Jul 24 '15 at 21:59






  • 21




    A sidenote: If Paul knows that you worked for Bob once and also knows that you know about his affiliation with Bob, he may consider your silence on this matter as evidence that Bob cannot be a very horrible person.
    – Temporarily Anonymous
    Jul 24 '15 at 22:48






  • 4




    If he is your friend, you should tell him.
    – Thorbjørn Ravn Andersen
    Jul 26 '15 at 8:09










  • How did this turn out?
    – Myles
    Apr 21 '16 at 19:27
















up vote
70
down vote

favorite
4












I have a friend who for the purposes of this question we'll refer to as Paul. Paul is a University professor who hasn't been actively involved in business outside of academia. He's shown me some very interesting algorithms he's developed with serious business applications. There are a few in particular that I think could make him significant money.



My former employer, who we'll call Bob, is not someone I'd work with again. I'm hesitant to disclose the details of why I don't trust Bob for fear of indirectly identifying him (or myself), but suffice it to say I believe my reasons are sound and not specific to my experiences with him. I would have serious concerns for anyone working with him.



Recently Bob began contracting with Paul and attempting to make some money off these ideas and algorithms. I'm not privy to the exact details of their situation, but I have a bad feeling that Bob may not have made everything fair. There may be nothing to worry about, but if my fears are correct Paul may be headed for a very bad situation.



On one hand, my friend is an adult and perfectly capable of making his own decisions. On the other hand, I would've greatly appreciated someone warning me what Bob was really like before I started working with him.



Should I warn my friend about Bob or leave it alone and mind my own business?







share|improve this question
















  • 20




    He may be an adult perfectly capable of making his own decisions, but keep in mind that, like everyone else, he'd be a lot more capable of making good decisions when he has good information to base them off of.
    – Mason Wheeler
    Jul 24 '15 at 21:31






  • 31




    Why would you not do that? It's not as if you're spreading unfounded rumours, or making the decision for him.
    – tomasz
    Jul 24 '15 at 21:59






  • 21




    A sidenote: If Paul knows that you worked for Bob once and also knows that you know about his affiliation with Bob, he may consider your silence on this matter as evidence that Bob cannot be a very horrible person.
    – Temporarily Anonymous
    Jul 24 '15 at 22:48






  • 4




    If he is your friend, you should tell him.
    – Thorbjørn Ravn Andersen
    Jul 26 '15 at 8:09










  • How did this turn out?
    – Myles
    Apr 21 '16 at 19:27












up vote
70
down vote

favorite
4









up vote
70
down vote

favorite
4






4





I have a friend who for the purposes of this question we'll refer to as Paul. Paul is a University professor who hasn't been actively involved in business outside of academia. He's shown me some very interesting algorithms he's developed with serious business applications. There are a few in particular that I think could make him significant money.



My former employer, who we'll call Bob, is not someone I'd work with again. I'm hesitant to disclose the details of why I don't trust Bob for fear of indirectly identifying him (or myself), but suffice it to say I believe my reasons are sound and not specific to my experiences with him. I would have serious concerns for anyone working with him.



Recently Bob began contracting with Paul and attempting to make some money off these ideas and algorithms. I'm not privy to the exact details of their situation, but I have a bad feeling that Bob may not have made everything fair. There may be nothing to worry about, but if my fears are correct Paul may be headed for a very bad situation.



On one hand, my friend is an adult and perfectly capable of making his own decisions. On the other hand, I would've greatly appreciated someone warning me what Bob was really like before I started working with him.



Should I warn my friend about Bob or leave it alone and mind my own business?







share|improve this question












I have a friend who for the purposes of this question we'll refer to as Paul. Paul is a University professor who hasn't been actively involved in business outside of academia. He's shown me some very interesting algorithms he's developed with serious business applications. There are a few in particular that I think could make him significant money.



My former employer, who we'll call Bob, is not someone I'd work with again. I'm hesitant to disclose the details of why I don't trust Bob for fear of indirectly identifying him (or myself), but suffice it to say I believe my reasons are sound and not specific to my experiences with him. I would have serious concerns for anyone working with him.



Recently Bob began contracting with Paul and attempting to make some money off these ideas and algorithms. I'm not privy to the exact details of their situation, but I have a bad feeling that Bob may not have made everything fair. There may be nothing to worry about, but if my fears are correct Paul may be headed for a very bad situation.



On one hand, my friend is an adult and perfectly capable of making his own decisions. On the other hand, I would've greatly appreciated someone warning me what Bob was really like before I started working with him.



Should I warn my friend about Bob or leave it alone and mind my own business?









share|improve this question











share|improve this question




share|improve this question










asked Jul 23 '15 at 20:36









Aabglov

5361511




5361511







  • 20




    He may be an adult perfectly capable of making his own decisions, but keep in mind that, like everyone else, he'd be a lot more capable of making good decisions when he has good information to base them off of.
    – Mason Wheeler
    Jul 24 '15 at 21:31






  • 31




    Why would you not do that? It's not as if you're spreading unfounded rumours, or making the decision for him.
    – tomasz
    Jul 24 '15 at 21:59






  • 21




    A sidenote: If Paul knows that you worked for Bob once and also knows that you know about his affiliation with Bob, he may consider your silence on this matter as evidence that Bob cannot be a very horrible person.
    – Temporarily Anonymous
    Jul 24 '15 at 22:48






  • 4




    If he is your friend, you should tell him.
    – Thorbjørn Ravn Andersen
    Jul 26 '15 at 8:09










  • How did this turn out?
    – Myles
    Apr 21 '16 at 19:27












  • 20




    He may be an adult perfectly capable of making his own decisions, but keep in mind that, like everyone else, he'd be a lot more capable of making good decisions when he has good information to base them off of.
    – Mason Wheeler
    Jul 24 '15 at 21:31






  • 31




    Why would you not do that? It's not as if you're spreading unfounded rumours, or making the decision for him.
    – tomasz
    Jul 24 '15 at 21:59






  • 21




    A sidenote: If Paul knows that you worked for Bob once and also knows that you know about his affiliation with Bob, he may consider your silence on this matter as evidence that Bob cannot be a very horrible person.
    – Temporarily Anonymous
    Jul 24 '15 at 22:48






  • 4




    If he is your friend, you should tell him.
    – Thorbjørn Ravn Andersen
    Jul 26 '15 at 8:09










  • How did this turn out?
    – Myles
    Apr 21 '16 at 19:27







20




20




He may be an adult perfectly capable of making his own decisions, but keep in mind that, like everyone else, he'd be a lot more capable of making good decisions when he has good information to base them off of.
– Mason Wheeler
Jul 24 '15 at 21:31




He may be an adult perfectly capable of making his own decisions, but keep in mind that, like everyone else, he'd be a lot more capable of making good decisions when he has good information to base them off of.
– Mason Wheeler
Jul 24 '15 at 21:31




31




31




Why would you not do that? It's not as if you're spreading unfounded rumours, or making the decision for him.
– tomasz
Jul 24 '15 at 21:59




Why would you not do that? It's not as if you're spreading unfounded rumours, or making the decision for him.
– tomasz
Jul 24 '15 at 21:59




21




21




A sidenote: If Paul knows that you worked for Bob once and also knows that you know about his affiliation with Bob, he may consider your silence on this matter as evidence that Bob cannot be a very horrible person.
– Temporarily Anonymous
Jul 24 '15 at 22:48




A sidenote: If Paul knows that you worked for Bob once and also knows that you know about his affiliation with Bob, he may consider your silence on this matter as evidence that Bob cannot be a very horrible person.
– Temporarily Anonymous
Jul 24 '15 at 22:48




4




4




If he is your friend, you should tell him.
– Thorbjørn Ravn Andersen
Jul 26 '15 at 8:09




If he is your friend, you should tell him.
– Thorbjørn Ravn Andersen
Jul 26 '15 at 8:09












How did this turn out?
– Myles
Apr 21 '16 at 19:27




How did this turn out?
– Myles
Apr 21 '16 at 19:27










4 Answers
4






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oldest

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up vote
123
down vote



accepted










Tell him about your experiences with this person and why you think it would be a bad business fit while also letting him know that this is his decision to make. Give some examples via your personal experiences to convey your point.



"Hey Paul, I know you are eager to make money, but I want to help you do it with the right person and I don't think Bob is that person because of x, y, and z. Ultimately it's up to you, but I felt that I should tell you this before you decide to work with him."



There's a reason websites like Glassdoor exist for these types of things.






share|improve this answer


















  • 3




    Thank you for your answer. You kept the advice general, professional and clear. I also quite enjoyed the Glassdoor comment.
    – Aabglov
    Jul 24 '15 at 15:24






  • 3




    Absolutely. We now live in a world of transparency. "Minding your own business" in our new world means bad things in this context. In the information age, bad business practices get exposed and anyone who is ignorant to this deserves what they get IMO.
    – Lawrence Aiello
    Jul 24 '15 at 15:26







  • 2




    @LawrenceAiello: Yes but you have to be really careful with that. It is impossible to distinguish helpful advice from slander at first glance. That's one of the reasons such transparency didn't exist in the "old world", and one of the reasons that the advances of the digital age aren't always a good thing. We don't need ten million vigilantes going around stirring up shit about everybody.
    – Lightness Races in Orbit
    Jul 24 '15 at 20:13







  • 1




    I advise you to advise Paul to be cautious or prepared with the information. For instance, Paul shouldn't act like someone who knows something about Bob that could have come from only a few people including you. Say Bob is, idk, a heavy drinker and then Paul is asked to go out drinking. What does Paul say/do ?
    – BCLC
    Jul 25 '15 at 11:55







  • 2




    "before I let you work with him" ??? That's strange wording. "before you contract with him" is probably better.
    – fredsbend
    Jul 25 '15 at 14:56

















up vote
77
down vote













As Paul is your friend he does deserve the benefit of your experience. You would warn your friend if you heard they were going to a mechanic that you've had bad experiences with so why not a business contact. Be a friend and don't let your friend get burned.






share|improve this answer
















  • 6




    I really like the example of a bad mechanic in your answer, it put my situation into perspective.
    – Aabglov
    Jul 24 '15 at 15:21

















up vote
55
down vote













If you withhold the data of your own experience with Bob, you are not looking out for Paul.



Yes, Paul is an adult and he makes his own decisions, but he can only make decisions based on the data that's available to him - you are skewing the game by not making available to him the data of your experience with Bob. Don't tell us that Paul is making an informed decision, if you are not lifting a finger to inform him.



If, after having shared your experience with Paul, Paul still decides to go ahead, that's his decision. If he decides to go ahead, he should do so on full alert and with some solid precautions in place. Like escape clauses in any contract that he signs with Bob in case Bob feels a (im)moral obligation or dastardly urge to screw Paul in the same way that hurts that Bob screwed you.






share|improve this answer






















  • Good point about putting him on full alert. He may not take my advice, but it would still help him make good decisions while working with Bob
    – Aabglov
    Jul 24 '15 at 15:22

















up vote
23
down vote














Should I warn my friend about Bob or leave it alone and mind my own business?




Warning your friend is both personally and professionally prudent and the ethical thing to do. Without being seen as engaging in slander, you can simply tell your friend something to the effect of "Given the nature of your work, I would be cautious about working with Bob or his company as in my experience I've dealt with xyz when working with Bob".



While your friend is an adult, all of us can benefit from knowledge not readily at our disposal from our own research and efforts. If your friend respects you, he will appreciate your advice/warning both personally and professionally. A bad business deal is bad no matter how you try to dress it, and no one wise enough would knowingly walk into a bad one with the likely downside consequences of it presented beforehand.






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    protected by Elysian Fields♦ Jul 28 '15 at 16:33



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    Because it has attracted low-quality or spam answers that had to be removed, posting an answer now requires 10 reputation on this site (the association bonus does not count).



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    4 Answers
    4






    active

    oldest

    votes








    4 Answers
    4






    active

    oldest

    votes









    active

    oldest

    votes






    active

    oldest

    votes








    up vote
    123
    down vote



    accepted










    Tell him about your experiences with this person and why you think it would be a bad business fit while also letting him know that this is his decision to make. Give some examples via your personal experiences to convey your point.



    "Hey Paul, I know you are eager to make money, but I want to help you do it with the right person and I don't think Bob is that person because of x, y, and z. Ultimately it's up to you, but I felt that I should tell you this before you decide to work with him."



    There's a reason websites like Glassdoor exist for these types of things.






    share|improve this answer


















    • 3




      Thank you for your answer. You kept the advice general, professional and clear. I also quite enjoyed the Glassdoor comment.
      – Aabglov
      Jul 24 '15 at 15:24






    • 3




      Absolutely. We now live in a world of transparency. "Minding your own business" in our new world means bad things in this context. In the information age, bad business practices get exposed and anyone who is ignorant to this deserves what they get IMO.
      – Lawrence Aiello
      Jul 24 '15 at 15:26







    • 2




      @LawrenceAiello: Yes but you have to be really careful with that. It is impossible to distinguish helpful advice from slander at first glance. That's one of the reasons such transparency didn't exist in the "old world", and one of the reasons that the advances of the digital age aren't always a good thing. We don't need ten million vigilantes going around stirring up shit about everybody.
      – Lightness Races in Orbit
      Jul 24 '15 at 20:13







    • 1




      I advise you to advise Paul to be cautious or prepared with the information. For instance, Paul shouldn't act like someone who knows something about Bob that could have come from only a few people including you. Say Bob is, idk, a heavy drinker and then Paul is asked to go out drinking. What does Paul say/do ?
      – BCLC
      Jul 25 '15 at 11:55







    • 2




      "before I let you work with him" ??? That's strange wording. "before you contract with him" is probably better.
      – fredsbend
      Jul 25 '15 at 14:56














    up vote
    123
    down vote



    accepted










    Tell him about your experiences with this person and why you think it would be a bad business fit while also letting him know that this is his decision to make. Give some examples via your personal experiences to convey your point.



    "Hey Paul, I know you are eager to make money, but I want to help you do it with the right person and I don't think Bob is that person because of x, y, and z. Ultimately it's up to you, but I felt that I should tell you this before you decide to work with him."



    There's a reason websites like Glassdoor exist for these types of things.






    share|improve this answer


















    • 3




      Thank you for your answer. You kept the advice general, professional and clear. I also quite enjoyed the Glassdoor comment.
      – Aabglov
      Jul 24 '15 at 15:24






    • 3




      Absolutely. We now live in a world of transparency. "Minding your own business" in our new world means bad things in this context. In the information age, bad business practices get exposed and anyone who is ignorant to this deserves what they get IMO.
      – Lawrence Aiello
      Jul 24 '15 at 15:26







    • 2




      @LawrenceAiello: Yes but you have to be really careful with that. It is impossible to distinguish helpful advice from slander at first glance. That's one of the reasons such transparency didn't exist in the "old world", and one of the reasons that the advances of the digital age aren't always a good thing. We don't need ten million vigilantes going around stirring up shit about everybody.
      – Lightness Races in Orbit
      Jul 24 '15 at 20:13







    • 1




      I advise you to advise Paul to be cautious or prepared with the information. For instance, Paul shouldn't act like someone who knows something about Bob that could have come from only a few people including you. Say Bob is, idk, a heavy drinker and then Paul is asked to go out drinking. What does Paul say/do ?
      – BCLC
      Jul 25 '15 at 11:55







    • 2




      "before I let you work with him" ??? That's strange wording. "before you contract with him" is probably better.
      – fredsbend
      Jul 25 '15 at 14:56












    up vote
    123
    down vote



    accepted







    up vote
    123
    down vote



    accepted






    Tell him about your experiences with this person and why you think it would be a bad business fit while also letting him know that this is his decision to make. Give some examples via your personal experiences to convey your point.



    "Hey Paul, I know you are eager to make money, but I want to help you do it with the right person and I don't think Bob is that person because of x, y, and z. Ultimately it's up to you, but I felt that I should tell you this before you decide to work with him."



    There's a reason websites like Glassdoor exist for these types of things.






    share|improve this answer














    Tell him about your experiences with this person and why you think it would be a bad business fit while also letting him know that this is his decision to make. Give some examples via your personal experiences to convey your point.



    "Hey Paul, I know you are eager to make money, but I want to help you do it with the right person and I don't think Bob is that person because of x, y, and z. Ultimately it's up to you, but I felt that I should tell you this before you decide to work with him."



    There's a reason websites like Glassdoor exist for these types of things.







    share|improve this answer














    share|improve this answer



    share|improve this answer








    edited Jul 25 '15 at 16:08

























    answered Jul 23 '15 at 20:42









    Lawrence Aiello

    11k63155




    11k63155







    • 3




      Thank you for your answer. You kept the advice general, professional and clear. I also quite enjoyed the Glassdoor comment.
      – Aabglov
      Jul 24 '15 at 15:24






    • 3




      Absolutely. We now live in a world of transparency. "Minding your own business" in our new world means bad things in this context. In the information age, bad business practices get exposed and anyone who is ignorant to this deserves what they get IMO.
      – Lawrence Aiello
      Jul 24 '15 at 15:26







    • 2




      @LawrenceAiello: Yes but you have to be really careful with that. It is impossible to distinguish helpful advice from slander at first glance. That's one of the reasons such transparency didn't exist in the "old world", and one of the reasons that the advances of the digital age aren't always a good thing. We don't need ten million vigilantes going around stirring up shit about everybody.
      – Lightness Races in Orbit
      Jul 24 '15 at 20:13







    • 1




      I advise you to advise Paul to be cautious or prepared with the information. For instance, Paul shouldn't act like someone who knows something about Bob that could have come from only a few people including you. Say Bob is, idk, a heavy drinker and then Paul is asked to go out drinking. What does Paul say/do ?
      – BCLC
      Jul 25 '15 at 11:55







    • 2




      "before I let you work with him" ??? That's strange wording. "before you contract with him" is probably better.
      – fredsbend
      Jul 25 '15 at 14:56












    • 3




      Thank you for your answer. You kept the advice general, professional and clear. I also quite enjoyed the Glassdoor comment.
      – Aabglov
      Jul 24 '15 at 15:24






    • 3




      Absolutely. We now live in a world of transparency. "Minding your own business" in our new world means bad things in this context. In the information age, bad business practices get exposed and anyone who is ignorant to this deserves what they get IMO.
      – Lawrence Aiello
      Jul 24 '15 at 15:26







    • 2




      @LawrenceAiello: Yes but you have to be really careful with that. It is impossible to distinguish helpful advice from slander at first glance. That's one of the reasons such transparency didn't exist in the "old world", and one of the reasons that the advances of the digital age aren't always a good thing. We don't need ten million vigilantes going around stirring up shit about everybody.
      – Lightness Races in Orbit
      Jul 24 '15 at 20:13







    • 1




      I advise you to advise Paul to be cautious or prepared with the information. For instance, Paul shouldn't act like someone who knows something about Bob that could have come from only a few people including you. Say Bob is, idk, a heavy drinker and then Paul is asked to go out drinking. What does Paul say/do ?
      – BCLC
      Jul 25 '15 at 11:55







    • 2




      "before I let you work with him" ??? That's strange wording. "before you contract with him" is probably better.
      – fredsbend
      Jul 25 '15 at 14:56







    3




    3




    Thank you for your answer. You kept the advice general, professional and clear. I also quite enjoyed the Glassdoor comment.
    – Aabglov
    Jul 24 '15 at 15:24




    Thank you for your answer. You kept the advice general, professional and clear. I also quite enjoyed the Glassdoor comment.
    – Aabglov
    Jul 24 '15 at 15:24




    3




    3




    Absolutely. We now live in a world of transparency. "Minding your own business" in our new world means bad things in this context. In the information age, bad business practices get exposed and anyone who is ignorant to this deserves what they get IMO.
    – Lawrence Aiello
    Jul 24 '15 at 15:26





    Absolutely. We now live in a world of transparency. "Minding your own business" in our new world means bad things in this context. In the information age, bad business practices get exposed and anyone who is ignorant to this deserves what they get IMO.
    – Lawrence Aiello
    Jul 24 '15 at 15:26





    2




    2




    @LawrenceAiello: Yes but you have to be really careful with that. It is impossible to distinguish helpful advice from slander at first glance. That's one of the reasons such transparency didn't exist in the "old world", and one of the reasons that the advances of the digital age aren't always a good thing. We don't need ten million vigilantes going around stirring up shit about everybody.
    – Lightness Races in Orbit
    Jul 24 '15 at 20:13





    @LawrenceAiello: Yes but you have to be really careful with that. It is impossible to distinguish helpful advice from slander at first glance. That's one of the reasons such transparency didn't exist in the "old world", and one of the reasons that the advances of the digital age aren't always a good thing. We don't need ten million vigilantes going around stirring up shit about everybody.
    – Lightness Races in Orbit
    Jul 24 '15 at 20:13





    1




    1




    I advise you to advise Paul to be cautious or prepared with the information. For instance, Paul shouldn't act like someone who knows something about Bob that could have come from only a few people including you. Say Bob is, idk, a heavy drinker and then Paul is asked to go out drinking. What does Paul say/do ?
    – BCLC
    Jul 25 '15 at 11:55





    I advise you to advise Paul to be cautious or prepared with the information. For instance, Paul shouldn't act like someone who knows something about Bob that could have come from only a few people including you. Say Bob is, idk, a heavy drinker and then Paul is asked to go out drinking. What does Paul say/do ?
    – BCLC
    Jul 25 '15 at 11:55





    2




    2




    "before I let you work with him" ??? That's strange wording. "before you contract with him" is probably better.
    – fredsbend
    Jul 25 '15 at 14:56




    "before I let you work with him" ??? That's strange wording. "before you contract with him" is probably better.
    – fredsbend
    Jul 25 '15 at 14:56












    up vote
    77
    down vote













    As Paul is your friend he does deserve the benefit of your experience. You would warn your friend if you heard they were going to a mechanic that you've had bad experiences with so why not a business contact. Be a friend and don't let your friend get burned.






    share|improve this answer
















    • 6




      I really like the example of a bad mechanic in your answer, it put my situation into perspective.
      – Aabglov
      Jul 24 '15 at 15:21














    up vote
    77
    down vote













    As Paul is your friend he does deserve the benefit of your experience. You would warn your friend if you heard they were going to a mechanic that you've had bad experiences with so why not a business contact. Be a friend and don't let your friend get burned.






    share|improve this answer
















    • 6




      I really like the example of a bad mechanic in your answer, it put my situation into perspective.
      – Aabglov
      Jul 24 '15 at 15:21












    up vote
    77
    down vote










    up vote
    77
    down vote









    As Paul is your friend he does deserve the benefit of your experience. You would warn your friend if you heard they were going to a mechanic that you've had bad experiences with so why not a business contact. Be a friend and don't let your friend get burned.






    share|improve this answer












    As Paul is your friend he does deserve the benefit of your experience. You would warn your friend if you heard they were going to a mechanic that you've had bad experiences with so why not a business contact. Be a friend and don't let your friend get burned.







    share|improve this answer












    share|improve this answer



    share|improve this answer










    answered Jul 23 '15 at 20:46









    Myles

    25.4k658104




    25.4k658104







    • 6




      I really like the example of a bad mechanic in your answer, it put my situation into perspective.
      – Aabglov
      Jul 24 '15 at 15:21












    • 6




      I really like the example of a bad mechanic in your answer, it put my situation into perspective.
      – Aabglov
      Jul 24 '15 at 15:21







    6




    6




    I really like the example of a bad mechanic in your answer, it put my situation into perspective.
    – Aabglov
    Jul 24 '15 at 15:21




    I really like the example of a bad mechanic in your answer, it put my situation into perspective.
    – Aabglov
    Jul 24 '15 at 15:21










    up vote
    55
    down vote













    If you withhold the data of your own experience with Bob, you are not looking out for Paul.



    Yes, Paul is an adult and he makes his own decisions, but he can only make decisions based on the data that's available to him - you are skewing the game by not making available to him the data of your experience with Bob. Don't tell us that Paul is making an informed decision, if you are not lifting a finger to inform him.



    If, after having shared your experience with Paul, Paul still decides to go ahead, that's his decision. If he decides to go ahead, he should do so on full alert and with some solid precautions in place. Like escape clauses in any contract that he signs with Bob in case Bob feels a (im)moral obligation or dastardly urge to screw Paul in the same way that hurts that Bob screwed you.






    share|improve this answer






















    • Good point about putting him on full alert. He may not take my advice, but it would still help him make good decisions while working with Bob
      – Aabglov
      Jul 24 '15 at 15:22














    up vote
    55
    down vote













    If you withhold the data of your own experience with Bob, you are not looking out for Paul.



    Yes, Paul is an adult and he makes his own decisions, but he can only make decisions based on the data that's available to him - you are skewing the game by not making available to him the data of your experience with Bob. Don't tell us that Paul is making an informed decision, if you are not lifting a finger to inform him.



    If, after having shared your experience with Paul, Paul still decides to go ahead, that's his decision. If he decides to go ahead, he should do so on full alert and with some solid precautions in place. Like escape clauses in any contract that he signs with Bob in case Bob feels a (im)moral obligation or dastardly urge to screw Paul in the same way that hurts that Bob screwed you.






    share|improve this answer






















    • Good point about putting him on full alert. He may not take my advice, but it would still help him make good decisions while working with Bob
      – Aabglov
      Jul 24 '15 at 15:22












    up vote
    55
    down vote










    up vote
    55
    down vote









    If you withhold the data of your own experience with Bob, you are not looking out for Paul.



    Yes, Paul is an adult and he makes his own decisions, but he can only make decisions based on the data that's available to him - you are skewing the game by not making available to him the data of your experience with Bob. Don't tell us that Paul is making an informed decision, if you are not lifting a finger to inform him.



    If, after having shared your experience with Paul, Paul still decides to go ahead, that's his decision. If he decides to go ahead, he should do so on full alert and with some solid precautions in place. Like escape clauses in any contract that he signs with Bob in case Bob feels a (im)moral obligation or dastardly urge to screw Paul in the same way that hurts that Bob screwed you.






    share|improve this answer














    If you withhold the data of your own experience with Bob, you are not looking out for Paul.



    Yes, Paul is an adult and he makes his own decisions, but he can only make decisions based on the data that's available to him - you are skewing the game by not making available to him the data of your experience with Bob. Don't tell us that Paul is making an informed decision, if you are not lifting a finger to inform him.



    If, after having shared your experience with Paul, Paul still decides to go ahead, that's his decision. If he decides to go ahead, he should do so on full alert and with some solid precautions in place. Like escape clauses in any contract that he signs with Bob in case Bob feels a (im)moral obligation or dastardly urge to screw Paul in the same way that hurts that Bob screwed you.







    share|improve this answer














    share|improve this answer



    share|improve this answer








    edited Jul 24 '15 at 3:07

























    answered Jul 23 '15 at 22:06









    Vietnhi Phuvan

    68.9k7118254




    68.9k7118254











    • Good point about putting him on full alert. He may not take my advice, but it would still help him make good decisions while working with Bob
      – Aabglov
      Jul 24 '15 at 15:22
















    • Good point about putting him on full alert. He may not take my advice, but it would still help him make good decisions while working with Bob
      – Aabglov
      Jul 24 '15 at 15:22















    Good point about putting him on full alert. He may not take my advice, but it would still help him make good decisions while working with Bob
    – Aabglov
    Jul 24 '15 at 15:22




    Good point about putting him on full alert. He may not take my advice, but it would still help him make good decisions while working with Bob
    – Aabglov
    Jul 24 '15 at 15:22










    up vote
    23
    down vote














    Should I warn my friend about Bob or leave it alone and mind my own business?




    Warning your friend is both personally and professionally prudent and the ethical thing to do. Without being seen as engaging in slander, you can simply tell your friend something to the effect of "Given the nature of your work, I would be cautious about working with Bob or his company as in my experience I've dealt with xyz when working with Bob".



    While your friend is an adult, all of us can benefit from knowledge not readily at our disposal from our own research and efforts. If your friend respects you, he will appreciate your advice/warning both personally and professionally. A bad business deal is bad no matter how you try to dress it, and no one wise enough would knowingly walk into a bad one with the likely downside consequences of it presented beforehand.






    share|improve this answer
























      up vote
      23
      down vote














      Should I warn my friend about Bob or leave it alone and mind my own business?




      Warning your friend is both personally and professionally prudent and the ethical thing to do. Without being seen as engaging in slander, you can simply tell your friend something to the effect of "Given the nature of your work, I would be cautious about working with Bob or his company as in my experience I've dealt with xyz when working with Bob".



      While your friend is an adult, all of us can benefit from knowledge not readily at our disposal from our own research and efforts. If your friend respects you, he will appreciate your advice/warning both personally and professionally. A bad business deal is bad no matter how you try to dress it, and no one wise enough would knowingly walk into a bad one with the likely downside consequences of it presented beforehand.






      share|improve this answer






















        up vote
        23
        down vote










        up vote
        23
        down vote










        Should I warn my friend about Bob or leave it alone and mind my own business?




        Warning your friend is both personally and professionally prudent and the ethical thing to do. Without being seen as engaging in slander, you can simply tell your friend something to the effect of "Given the nature of your work, I would be cautious about working with Bob or his company as in my experience I've dealt with xyz when working with Bob".



        While your friend is an adult, all of us can benefit from knowledge not readily at our disposal from our own research and efforts. If your friend respects you, he will appreciate your advice/warning both personally and professionally. A bad business deal is bad no matter how you try to dress it, and no one wise enough would knowingly walk into a bad one with the likely downside consequences of it presented beforehand.






        share|improve this answer













        Should I warn my friend about Bob or leave it alone and mind my own business?




        Warning your friend is both personally and professionally prudent and the ethical thing to do. Without being seen as engaging in slander, you can simply tell your friend something to the effect of "Given the nature of your work, I would be cautious about working with Bob or his company as in my experience I've dealt with xyz when working with Bob".



        While your friend is an adult, all of us can benefit from knowledge not readily at our disposal from our own research and efforts. If your friend respects you, he will appreciate your advice/warning both personally and professionally. A bad business deal is bad no matter how you try to dress it, and no one wise enough would knowingly walk into a bad one with the likely downside consequences of it presented beforehand.







        share|improve this answer












        share|improve this answer



        share|improve this answer










        answered Jul 23 '15 at 20:53









        Alex

        3,3561130




        3,3561130















            protected by Elysian Fields♦ Jul 28 '15 at 16:33



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