Josh Hendy
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- Apr 12, 2007
- Messages
- 1,294
This is not a first amendment issue. The purpose of the first amendment, and indeed of the entire Bill of Rights, is to place limitations on what the government, and only the government, can do that infringes on our rights. You have no first amendment rights at your place of employment. An employer is not bound by the constitution and is free to limit your speech in any way they see fit to protect their interests.
This isn't about what happens at the place of employment, it's about whether it is reasonable for an employer to demand restrictions on what happens outside of the employer's property.
It is reasonable to demand that when not working, employees do not denigrate their employer, violate copyright or trademarks, or give away trade secrets.
But it's a big stretch of logic to claim that the identities of actors playing cartoon characters is a trade secret. In fact it's not credible. The cartoons themselves list the names of voice actors and animators, right in plain sight in the credits. Disney is apparently trying to claim that children might read someone's facebook or linkedin and find out that they play a character at WDW which the child previously thought was a real, living cartoon. Thus spoiling WDW for the child and reducing Disney's business prospects. Yet (Disney will have to claim), the same child who browses actors' facebook pages is incapable of reading cartoon credits or deducing that the cartoon is just drawings, or that a person is inside a costume at WDW.
Disney can make all the reasonable demands on employees' behavior that they want. "Don't harm our business either when you're working here or when you're not working here." But if they're going to make unreasonable demands on workers, appealing to logic which would be laughed out of court, then it's a matter of negotiation and mutual agreement.