Yahoo CEO Scott Thompson's bogus resume claim: A firable offense?

In the latest embarrassment for the struggling search engine, Yahoo's chief admits that he didn't actually receive a college degree in computer science

Yahoo! headquarters in Sunnyvale, California
(Image credit: AP Photo/Paul Sakuma)

In a "bizarre crisis" for Yahoo, CEO Scott Thompson has been forced to admit that he did not receive a bachelor's degree in computer science from Stonehill College — despite long claiming on his resume that he had. (He actually studied accounting and business administration.) Thompson was hired only four months ago to revive the ailing search engine, but now the hedge fund Third Point — an activist shareholder that is trying to gain control of Yahoo's board of directors — says it will hit the company with a lawsuit if Thompson isn't fired. The controversy comes at the worst time for Yahoo, which recently fired 2,000 workers as part of a massive overhaul designed to help it better compete with Google and Facebook. Should Yahoo let Thompson go?

Yes. Thompson has misled companies for years: It's "outrageous and insufficient" for Thompson to call the resume gaffe merely "an inadvertent mistake," as Yahoo has argued, says Nicholas Carlson at Business Insider. He's been claiming a degree in computer science for years; it appeared on his bio when he was PayPal's chief technology officer, a title that makes the misstatement even more glaring. "More importantly, it is inconceivable that he didn't know his bio was wrong for so long."

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