It’s already well known at work that I don’t just not like gore videos but that I hate them and actively avoid them.

A colleague sent me a video of a man being murdered by axe via WhatsApp to my personal phone on my lunch break. Before I opened it I asked if it was a video that I would want to see (because I know what sort of character he is), he implied it was fine.

Despite my suspicion I took his word and watched it. I immediately scolded him, he then made light of the situation, I told him that it wasn’t funny and that if it ever happened again I would be making a formal complaint immediately.

A couple of minutes later, another colleague came in to the mess room, the guy that sent the video made fun of me for not liking the video in front of them. I told him that he was making fun of me and that I wasn’t ok with that.

Do I have the right to not be sent murder videos? What would an employer do if I made a complaint?

  • @doubtingtammy@lemmy.ml
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    402 months ago

    It’s already well known at work that I don’t just not like gore videos but that I hate them and actively avoid them.

    What the FUCK is going on at your work? I know this isn’t always an option, but I suggest you run away. A workplace where you’re considered the weird one because you don’t like snuff vids? I really doubt a complaint could fix that environment, it sounds rotten to the core

  • @Kongar@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    202 months ago

    If I knew who you were and what company you worked for, I’D report that to HR. If that ever happened at my office I’d fire the guy without even consulting HR. I’d confiscate his stuff and walk him out the door, HR can clean up the mess.

    If there was one hint of retaliation by another employee, I’d fire them on the spot. If there is any hr or manager retaliation to you, you call a lawyer. You’ll be paid extremely well.

    The situation you described is so black and white in your favor - your management and hr department should be quaking in their boots that you don’t sue.

  • @pugsnroses77@sh.itjust.works
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    312 months ago

    thats highly disturbing and im sorry to hear that happened to you. your employer should absolutely take this seriously. whether or not they are legally obligated to, im not sure, but if you are at a large company speak to your office of ethics, associate relations, or if small, anyone in HR. just speak up.

  • @inb4_FoundTheVegan@lemmy.world
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    132 months ago

    All the advice about going to HR is great, and you absolutely should.

    But on a personal note, I’m really sorry you are dealing with this. Absolutely not even remotely okay for him to do this and you are well within your rights to force an end to this. Wildly unprofessional behavior and down right creepy behavior just on a personality level.

    I hope you find peace from him soon.

  • @ChocolateTeapot@lemmy.world
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    2 months ago

    He’s done this before, and you haven’t made a complaint???!

    Passing snuff movies around is disgusting - IANAL but I would suggest that at minimum it would be Gross Misconduct and, probably, highly illegal and he should be immediately dismissed and possibly arrested.

    However, I’m not a lawyer so I would contact ACAS ASAP, see https://www.acas.org.uk/ and log everything, inc. previous videos he’s sent around - don’t delete your evidence! But ACAS will advise you best.

    • XIIIesqOP
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      112 months ago

      I deleted it immediately because I can’t stand to have that sort of video on my phone.

      He’s not sent one to me directly before, but there is a work group chat where similar videos have come up (all deleted by me) and I left a comment saying what I thought about those types videos which pretty much brought them to a stop.

      • @teawrecks@sopuli.xyz
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        92 months ago

        Don’t delete it, don’t act like this is a minor inconvenience, walk directly to HR or your supervisor and tell them what is going on. This is will-not-work-until-this-matter-is-resolved levels of unacceptable.

  • @BruceLee@lemmy.ml
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    222 months ago

    As for law I don’t know but this is work harassement. Your company surely has a policy against it.
    I would advice you to go to your HR make a complain even you don’t go all the way to make sure he is punished, you should make sure they is a official trace of what happened. For you, for what you went thought also for the case he keeps going and for other how might be his next victims of harassment in the futur.

    • Yep work harassment. Not even a maybe.

      If some edgelord employee sent a picture of a gun to someone with no context, HR will file it under threat. The edgelord won’t get in serious trouble, but would be warned about that since it’s vague and can be anything from showing their cool gun collection, to threatening to shoot.

      Now a video of actual murder… You better believe thats harassment. No question about it. Immediate removal.

      And as the comment above - if he’s sending that to you, he absolutely will be sending nasty shit to your other coworkers, especially to those who can’t speak up or are too afraid.

  • @kat_angstrom@lemmy.world
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    532 months ago

    That’s some hostile workplace kind of BS, and shouldn’t be tolerated. Document everything, names, dates, info etc.

  • @Today@lemmy.world
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    982 months ago

    You’re being bullied. He will continue because he thinks you won’t respond. Bullies get worse, not better.

    • Diplomjodler
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      252 months ago

      Absolutely correct. That asshole knew exactly what he was doing and he is only going to escalate if OP doesn’t push back.

  • @Melatonin@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    162 months ago

    Not acceptable. I don’t know laws in the UK but that person should lose their job. Workplace harassment is a serious offense, as you are REQUIRED to be there, so your employer is required to provide you with a safe, harassment-free workplace.

    Keep evidence, keep everything, report everything, and keep doing it. Keep personal logs of who you talked to and when, what was said, even if there’s no other record. It’s possibly going to cost you your “team member” status, but that’s what the harasser is counting on. They are sadistic, and they’re going out of their way to make your life miserable and endanger your job and peace of mind.

    Show them no mercy.

    • @Kbobabob@lemmy.world
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      2 months ago

      Not every job has an HR department. And it’s my understanding that HR is primarily to benefit the company. I’ve never worked for a company with an HR department so take that for what it’s worth.

      • @redhorsejacket@lemmy.world
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        132 months ago

        You’re correct, HR is there to benefit the company. However, in this case, the goals align. OP wants to stop being sent objectionable material while at work. HR wants employees’ actions to not open the company up for litigation. Being able to prove that dickhead is engaging textbook harassment while on the clock should be an open and shut case.

        All of this is to be taken with a heaping handful of salt, since regulations differ wildly by jurisdiction, but this seems pretty clear cut to me.

      • @theneverfox@pawb.social
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        22 months ago

        This is exactly why HR departments exist. Had OP collected evidence, told management with a paper trail, and they failed to stop it? Or worse, told off OP because they don’t want to deal with it?

        The jerk could maybe get charged with a misdemeanor related to harassment or misuse of technology… Maybe the UK has something harsher or more specific, but at the end of the day it’s a bit extreme to put someone in jail or pay OPs wages if they were forced out of work

        The company on the other hand? They have a legal obligation to maintain a safe work environment. They also have deeper, easier to access pockets. A lot easier to get a lawyer to pursue that, which is expensive even if they win in the end

        If they’re clearly shown to have not taken reasonable action, they’d at least be on the hook for any lost wages or medical costs (not sure what decent therapy runs over there, less than the US I’m sure but I’m guessing not cheap). Even if OP quits or decides not to show up, it could be until they get a new job at similar pay with some extra thrown on top

        HR’s job is to cut this off before OP needs to be paid off, or much worse finds a lawyer. They don’t care about the employees, so safest could be to fire the guy - the least they’re going to do is officially reprimand the guy and follow up with OP to make sure it’s not worsening and OP isn’t feeling litigious

      • @teawrecks@sopuli.xyz
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        22 months ago

        Which is exactly why not having an HR dept is only detrimental for the company, not the employee. If the company doesn’t have an HR dept, they should consult a lawyer for a hostile work environment case. The lawyer will probably say he should first at least let his supervisor know, and if nothing is done, or if they retaliate, then they can show them why an HR dept is a good investment.

      • @some_guy@lemmy.sdf.org
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        12 months ago

        You’re correct, the HR dept is there to protect the company. And the actions of the employee sending gore vids potentially harms the company. Thus, HR will protect the employee when it protects itself. Think how HR would step in if someone was sending porn. That would harm the company. HR would intervene.

        They only don’t do shit when they can get away with it. Anything that a court would find absolutely objectionable (not maybe) will be curtailed.

  • @intensely_human@lemm.ee
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    182 months ago

    I think the more important question is: why did you not make the complaint? You said that you would, and you know it’s the right move, but you haven’t done it. Instead you came here to ask what would happen. Why?

  • lemmyreader
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    82 months ago

    Another thing you can consider is to find a good mediator and then have a chat with your colleague to talk about your boundaries and about their motives. You got lots of down-votes for your reluctance to complain and have the colleague fired and that made me think that your colleague getting fired might make things worse. Who knows what more horrible things the person would do after that. Something more constructive must be possible.

  • lemmyreader
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    82 months ago

    What a complete and utter distasteful thing to do by your colleague. You do have the other colleague as witness, kind of. In some countries you can get legal advice for free. No idea whether that applies for the UK. Having said that your colleague appears to be seeking for attention, negative or not. You really should define your personal boundaries. However the question is whether ignoring the person and blocking their private number or filing a complaint is going to give them more attention and more reason to harass you. I would talk with a few good friends in real time about this so you can vent or cry or shout about this horrible event. Stay safe!

  • @iAvicenna@lemmy.world
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    122 months ago

    your colleague is likely a borderline psychopath or antisocial at best (not asocial, antisocial big difference)

    • @Amanduh@lemm.ee
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      72 months ago

      I could see this just being someone who is immature and thinking they’re being funny, like someone who is ticklish but doesn’t like being tickled and people keep tickling them randomly.

      To be clear I am not condoning the actions of this person, if the op doesn’t want to see gore videos then their wishes should be respected. I’m just thinking back to younger me and I was such an asshole =/

    • @ShepherdPie@midwest.social
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      282 months ago

      Not only that, but “it’s known that I don’t like gore videos” like it’s some common thing that comes up in conversation. I’ve worked at some raunchy “boys will be boys” type places and the worst we would do is surprise each other with some gay porn images or stuff like ‘two girls one cup.’

      • VaultBoyNewVegas
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        102 months ago

        I’m opening myself here to be spammed but I’d much rather receive dick picks over snuff.

        • @Jimmyeatsausage@lemmy.world
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          22 months ago

          Yeah, but the guy that thinks sharing snuff films at work ok is likely to also be the kind of guy that is vehemently homophobic…and I mean the more scientific definition where exposure causes physical disgust or discomfort as opposed to the more political definition of just not viewing them as equals. I don’t think it’s a huge leap to assume this is the kind of person that would have the same visceral experience they shared with OP…especially if OP were to imply the massive, throbbing high definition photo was also actually gore.

    • @Fondots@lemmy.world
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      32 months ago

      Not exactly sending them to coworkers, but I did kind of refer a coworker to one once.

      I work in 911 dispatch, it’s kind of hard not to end up a little desensitized to some crazy shit. We once had a call about some kind of industrial accident, someone’s arm caught in a machine or something along those lines. Obviously not going to share too many specific details about the incident, but we did have a teams on location ready to do a field amputation if needed, but luckily they were able to get the person out without any major injuries.

      So our conversations tended to be about a lot of the crazy gory fucked up things we’d taken calls about or otherwise seen or heard about, and I mentioned the Russian lathe accident video to one of my coworkers (don’t look that up if you’re not the kind of fucked up who can deal with that sort of thing, it’s a guy getting caught in a heavy duty lathe and spun around and mashed against the machine until someone comes and hits the emergency stop, at which point there’s nothing much left of him)

      That piqued her interest, and she went and watched it on her phone at her next break.

      I wouldn’t send the video to anyone, especially not out of the blue, and when it comes up I warn people not to look it up if they’re the type of person who would be significantly disturbed by it. In general I won’t even mention it to people who don’t work either in some sort of emergency services or medical sort of field where we have to occasionally deal with that kind of thing, or in a machine shop where they’re working around those kinds of machines, and even then it’s something that only gets brought up to certain people in certain contexts.