07-13-2004, 09:21 AM | #1 |
Drama Queen
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Yea, You're Being Watched
You can stop wondering. A new study has confirmed what many cubicle dwellers have long suspected: Many companies, maybe even yours, are monitoring outgoing e-mails.
According to a new survey conducted by Forrester Consulting and sponsored by Proofpoint Inc., a company that makes anti-spam and mail filtering software, over 43% of corporations with more than 20,000 employees employ personnel to monitor and read their staff's outbound e-mail. The survey of 140 corporate decision-makers found that companies are concerned about employees leaking sensitive information via e-mail, which ranked as the biggest reason behind the snooping policy. The survey comes on the heels of a recent federal court ruling which held that it is perfectly legal for ISPs to read and copy the inbound e-mail of their clients. The ruling , by the U.S. Court of Appeals for the First Circuit in Boston, held that e-mail does not enjoy the same eavesdropping protections as telephone conversations, because it is stored on servers before being routed to recipients. (Excellent op/eds here and here) Word up: America Online, EarthLink, and Yahoo all have privacy policies prohibiting them from reading customer e-mail, except in the case of a court order. If it's sensitive, protect it. Don't use the bossman's server. |
07-13-2004, 09:38 AM | #2 |
mechanoholic
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If you're really concerned there's always webmail. Also there are many free implementations of PGP that can be used with nearly any email program for encryption. No one has the time to crack that, unless they are really sure you've got something they want.
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07-13-2004, 05:34 PM | #3 |
Drama Queen
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Um, yea, that's why I suggested Yahoo, etc.
Truth be told, I used to work for a Fortune 100 that employed this practice. If they're paying someone to scan, filter, or read your email, that same person would have plenty of time to try and crack your encryption and the co. would wonder why you have it. |
07-13-2004, 05:39 PM | #4 |
Groupie
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While I can understand the desire for privacy, I also understand that while I'm on company time, and on company resources, I need to watch out for the COMPANY's interests. This also means that "my email", as hosted by my employer, is not technically "mine". It's a name, on loan to me to help me do the job for which the employer is paying me for.
In short, I shouldn't be using it for non-work related items anyway. As for using company email to send out confidential info to outside corporate spies. That's just stupid. Egads. /shrug/ Don't know what to say on this one, except that I'm not REALLY all that shocked and surprised. 1984, anyone? |
07-14-2004, 12:09 PM | #5 |
Guru
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Scary... I think I should stop using my work e-mail address for private matters... ;(
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07-14-2004, 04:27 PM | #6 |
Drama Queen
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derekweb: It has as much to do with the company's desire to protect the employees as it is to protect themselves. Laws like HIPAA (medical privacy) incure liability on all sides, particularly for HR staff.
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11-05-2010, 11:12 PM | #7 |
Enthusiast
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here is a thought , when you are at work than DO YOUR WORK . You can't have someone spying on your private doings if you are not doing anything private where you shouldn't be ...
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