On balance, the new consensus is probably better.
On balance.
But still, I question the wisdom of prohibition on dating anyone who youโve ever known or might know professionally, as the modern consensus seems to be arriving at. Because it seems to be creeping towards you shouldnโt date anyone you actually know in any sphere of life, or if youโre a man, anyone that you meet in public (as then you resemble a harasser*), or that you might have potentially had some kind of nebulous and probably non-existent power advantage over at any time.
Not everyone wants to use Tinder or PlentyOfFish.
To be completely honest if I were a college professor, the chance that Iโd date one of my students (especially if we were close in age range) is nearly 100%. Perhaps not while she is in my class, and itโd not be something I seek out, but I canโt see how Iโd even avoid that as I simply donโt care about such institutional prudery when more important things are at stake and never will. Iโm fully willing to accept my non-compliance with the rules, and always have been. (By way of anecdote, of the four college professors Iโve known in my life, all four have dated students or former students. Two of the professors were women.)
The company I work for full-time is German, and they specifically do not have prohibitions of dating co-workers because many, many people in Germany meet their SOs on the job. The only prohibition is that you canโt date your direct boss while he/she is your manager.
Anyway, speaking on a more general level you just canโt coop up a few hundred people with high similarity and mutual admiration where they interact all the time andโฆexpect them not to interact. Human nature just does not, will not, and cannot work that way. It is just impossible. Completely so.
But people โ mostly men โ take advantage of that. Exert their power. Harass. Rape. That is obviously happening. And itโs terrible for the (mostly) women involved.
The problem is that Iโm quite sure that you canโt legislate human attraction. You can try, but oh you are going to fail so hard. So very hard.
So like I said, on balance the modern consensus that you shouldnโt be attracted to anyone you actually know (especially in a professional context) is probably better.
But what a restrictive world weโre building for ourselves. Itโs probably worth it, as harassment and rape is so heinous. But itโs not a nice one, or a pretty one, or a very desirable one, especially for those who donโt like online meat market dating only.
*Yes, I know men have made the world worse. But for men who are not harassers, rapists, and similar, it also makes life very hard for them.
I’m in software, and from what I’ve seen, the attitude and policies are the same as at your company. There were plenty of couples who met at work in both companies I’ve been in. My impression is that over time, dating coworkers has actually become more accepted.