Your boss can read your private chat now

Jan 13, 2016 16:51

Private messages at work can be read by employers, says court

Employees in the EU better watch out from now on. Their bosses can snoop into their online communications, a human rights court has ruled. The whole case started with a scandal in 2007 where a Romanian engineer was fired after his boss had found out he was using Yahoo Messenger to chat ( Read more... )

human rights, eu, privacy, labor

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Comments 6

luzribeiro January 13 2016, 19:27:06 UTC
Hey employers, put a firewall blocking unwanted applications and web domains. Problem solved.

I'm more with the hipster-rebel type on this one. If that's how people to whom personal privacy still counts for something are called now.

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htpcl January 13 2016, 19:29:17 UTC
I work at a private company. We spend 9 hours at the office. We never fill 9*60 minutes with work. That's not realistic. When there's work, we work. When there isn't work, we just do some leisure around the Webz. You can't expect us to spend every single second of every single minute of our work time... well, working. We'd burn off in less than a year if we do that. Then they'd have to replace us with someone else, and waste time training them in what we do, which is far less profitable than just allowing us to mix work with leisure. There's a balance to be sought there.

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wuvvumsoc January 13 2016, 22:23:10 UTC
Pretty much this. I get two paid breaks that are 15 minutes a day. I usually check facebook.

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abomvubuso January 13 2016, 19:47:14 UTC
My employees and I actually use Skype for communicating between ourselves. We send documents, we arrange meetings, and we make conference chats both for work and for fun.

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peamasii January 13 2016, 20:27:15 UTC
It's a stupid move by the Romanian company. First of all it's not so easy to find good qualified personnel, and the cost of recruiting and training new people is rising. Second, the engineer didn't do anything wrong so why invoke personal usage of a messenger service as the pretext? If they have some real beef, they should spit it out rather than hiding behind the pretense that they can own people 100% of the time. And looking at someone's chat is the kind of douchebag move that just reeks of arrogant stupidity. Third, I know the Romanian companies generally pay crap so they probably did him a favour by forcing him to look for much better work conditions elsewhere.

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mikeyxw January 14 2016, 00:07:33 UTC
I'd tend to agree on all points. Maybe there was a different and maybe valid reason for firing this person, if so, the company should have used that. Right now, they look like a terrible place to work who will only be able to hire the people who can't find jobs elsewhere.

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