Girls In Tech

An organization focused on women's innovative and entrepreneurial achievements in technology

  • About
  • GIT Mentorship
  • GIT Spotlight
  • GIT University
  • Join Us
  • Press
  • Sponsors
Home » Archives for HTC-2

The Blurred Line between Personal and Work Use of Technology is Impacting Privacy Law

August 10th, 2010
All Chapters, Los Angeles
profile picture

Meredith Davis Williams

Technology use in the workplace is a double-edged sword.  On the one hand, it allows for increased efficiency and flexibility because we can communicate with co-workers and clients instantly from wherever we are through numerous mediums from a single handheld.  On the other hand, it has given us all a serious case of ADD.  And more importantly, it has blurred the line between what’s personal and what’s work.

We use our Blackberries, iPhones, iPads, Droids, and HTC-2s to send an email to a client or boss on our  companies’  systems one minute, and then use the same handheld to send a personal email to a  friend,  accountant, or lawyer  on our personal email account the next minute.  The same happens from desktops and  laptops.

The privacy issue arises when that handheld, laptop, or desktop is provided by a company to one of its  employees. Do the employees have a right to privacy in their communications when they send a  personal  email  over the company’s email system? When they use a company’s computer to send an  email from a  personal account  using the company’s Internet service? When they send text messages on employer-  provided phones and handhelds?  What is considered a reasonable personal use of company-provided devices in a world when employees are expected to answer emails from home and from handhelds and when they are expected to work 10 to 12 hour days?

These are just the sort of issues that are currently making their way through the state and federal court systems.

In a recent decision involving text messages sent on government-employer owned cell phones, the U.S. Supreme Court declined to make a broad ruling on the issue of “privacy expectations vis-à-vis employer-provided technological equipment” because of thepotential future impact such a ruling could have in an area where “rapid changes in the dynamics of communications and information transmission” are affecting both the technology itself as well as “what society accepts as proper behavior.”*

Because the legal analysis in privacy cases centers on a person’s “reasonable expectation of privacy,” what we accept as a societal norm affects what is considered “reasonable” from both an objective and subjective point of view.**

Despite the Supreme Court’s refusal to provide a broad ruling on this issue, it did not find that the City violated the employee’s privacy rights when it reviewed the content of his text messages.  The factual grounds supporting this finding were that: there was a workplace policy which indicated that text messages could be reviewed; and there was a legitimate work-related purpose for the review (i.e., determining whether text message overage charges required the City to increase its phone plan).

The implications of this decision are huge – even without a broader ruling and despite the differing privacy analyses that apply to public vs. private employers – because it essentially says that so long as employers properly craft their workplace policies regarding technology use, they can significantly erode employees’ privacy rights.  This is particularly troubling in an age when technology is trending toward the increased availability of a one-size-fits-all devices and when the distinctions between one’s personal and work life are being significantly blurred.

Meredith D. Williams is an employment lawyer in Los Angeles, California and a partner at Miller | Williams LLP, an employment litigation and counseling law firm, providing businesses of all sizes, as well as selected employees, experienced and cost-effective legal services in a wide range of employment-related litigation and counseling matters, including matters involving employee privacy, discrimination, harassment, retaliation, and wage and hour issues.  Contact her: mwilliams@millerwilliamslaw.com or @MerEsqLA

*See City of Ontario v. Quon, 560 U.S. ____ (No. 08-1332, June 17, 2010).
** The “reasonable expectation of privacy” issue is relevant in the context of Fourth Amendment privacy cases involving public employers as well as in the context of common law “intrusion on seclusion” privacy cases involving private employers.  See Stengart v. Loving Care Agency, Inc., 201 NJ. 300, 990 A2d 650 (N.J. 2010).

Share:
  • Print
  • Digg
  • StumbleUpon
  • del.icio.us
  • Facebook
  • Yahoo! Buzz
  • Twitter
  • Google Bookmarks
  • email
  • Google Buzz
  • HackerNews
  • LinkedIn
  • Posterous
  • RSS
  • Tumblr
  • Reddit

Tags: ADD, blackberry, Droid, girls in tech, HTC-2, iphone, LA Chapter, Meredith D Williams, Miller Williams, Personal Use of Company Technology Devices, Quon, right to privacy, Supreme Court, Text Messages
Posted in All Chapters, Los Angeles | 2 Comments »

  • Events Calendar

    February 2012
    M T W T F S S
    « Jan    
     12345
    6789101112
    13141516171819
    20212223242526
    272829  
  • Recent Jobs

    View All Jobs Post a Job

    Director, Tax Tools & Technology

    Intuit, San Diego, CA

    Instructor, Manufacturing Technology

    Coast Community College District, Costa Mesa, CA

    District Technology Manager

    Halliburton, Naples, UT

    Sr Recruiter - Technology

    Target.com, Minneapolis, MN

    Retail Technology Support Manager

    Apple, Cupertino, CA

    QA Engineer-HR Technology

    Apple, Cupertino, CA

    Associate Underwriter- Technology

    Zurich North America, San Francisco, CA

    Information Technology Specialist

    Army National Guard, Indianapolis, IN

    Information Technology Specialist

    United States Department of Veterans Affairs, Forest, VA

    Customer Technology Marketing Analyst

    UPS, Alpharetta, GA

  • Search

  • Facebook

  • GIT Partners

    Tagged Ad #1
    Girls in Tech China
    GIT Boise
    DEMO Asia
    SMW
    Girls in Tech New York
    CARE General
    Gimme
    PBworks
    Girl Up
    Tripping
    24 Notion
  • GIT Photostream

    A photo on Flickr
    A photo on Flickr
    A photo on Flickr
    A photo on Flickr
    A photo on Flickr
    A photo on Flickr
    A photo on Flickr
    A photo on Flickr
    A photo on Flickr
  • Archives

  • Tag Cloud

    "Lucia Giacomantonio" 24notion Adriana Gascoigne Christine Oneto conference Developers entrepreneur entrepreneurs entrepreneurship event Events facebook fashion gaming Geeks on a Plane girls in tech GIT gitpdx Google innovation iphone ivo Ivo Lukas laurel kaufman Los Angeles marketing networking New York City open source oregon Portland San Francisco santa cruz Silicon Valley social media social networking tech technology Terra Khachooni Tina Tran twitter venture capital women women in tech women in technology
  • lll

Privacy · Login
Blog Posts - RSS and Blog Comments - RSS