I think they're saying that their workforce will include such violent offenders. Good for them. Probably most of these people need another chance and are worthy of it.
But I can't say I'd be comfortable calling them to my home. My father once hired a youth offender to do yardwork. He worked for him for several months. About a year later he came to the house with a girlfriend, robbed the occupants, and murdered two of them. They were the family I sold the house to after my father died.
Maybe my bias against violent offenders is bigotry. Surely this was a rare case. It isn't very fair to generalize. Yet I do fear them, and if I used this service I'd make an effort not to let them know where I live. It seems likely that many other people feel this way. That gives Cracked It a particularly tough hill to climb for a startup. I wish them well.
I love seeing the same principles applied to communications.
That's my theory anyway, I bet you all are clever and can think of counterexamples.
Why? Due to SEO penalization?
Serves them right though, cluttering up google searches with resolutions hidden behind a paywall. That's karma for you. And bad preparation obviously.
But anyway, stackoverflow/stackexchange have rightly taken their place.
A similar business locally working with ex-offenders is redemption roasters (coffee).
Another really good example of how this can be successful helping people is Timpson’s.