> Anonymous complaints are an ethical issue. If you have no recourse then complaints become pernicious.
The complaint itself is not anonymous, there is an intercessor which knows the identities of both parties, and who is the recourse.
> Also, they forwarded some pretty basic details, an email and a name. They weren't sent her SSN, mailing address, or anything like that, so it's no more identity than she associates already with her email address, as far as I can tell.
Oh great, they didn't send enough for a complete identity takeover so I guess everything'sā¦ wait what?
They sent personal information to somebody who might ā if the complaint was well founded (which it clearly was) ā take retributive action. That does not strike me as an ethical or sensible move.
> You need to be able to contact a complainant, otherwise there is no resolution, only a complaint.
No, not necessarily and definitely not if the complaint is simply a well-founded one where the resolution is to fix your shit. And if it turns out you do actually genuinely need to directly contact the complainant, contact information can be asked of the intercessor.
The complaint itself is not anonymous, there is an intercessor which knows the identities of both parties, and who is the recourse.
> Also, they forwarded some pretty basic details, an email and a name. They weren't sent her SSN, mailing address, or anything like that, so it's no more identity than she associates already with her email address, as far as I can tell.
Oh great, they didn't send enough for a complete identity takeover so I guess everything'sā¦ wait what?
They sent personal information to somebody who might ā if the complaint was well founded (which it clearly was) ā take retributive action. That does not strike me as an ethical or sensible move.
> You need to be able to contact a complainant, otherwise there is no resolution, only a complaint.
No, not necessarily and definitely not if the complaint is simply a well-founded one where the resolution is to fix your shit. And if it turns out you do actually genuinely need to directly contact the complainant, contact information can be asked of the intercessor.