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Can your boss spy on you at work? Right to privacy in the digital workplace.

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Manage episode 213213814 series 2400674
Content provided by re:publica. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by re:publica or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.
Do you have to abandon your right to privacy every morning at the doors of your workplace? Can your employer monitor private chats with your family? Based on research projects at the Centre for Internet and Human Rights, we will unpack the issue of digital surveillance at work and discuss regulatory gaps and potential policy responses.
  • Kilian Vieth
  • Joanna Bronowicka

If you work in Europe, your privacy at the workplace might depend on the upcoming ruling of the the European Court of Human Rights in the Barbulescu case. Barnulescu was a Romanian engineer fired in 2007 for chatting online with his fiancée at work. Due to be issued this year, the ruling will define the meaning of privacy at work for employees in the 47 countries that have ratified the European Convention of Human Rights.

In the decade since Barbulescu was fired, the pace of technological change has accelerated. Today, the technologies used to supervise employees at work include not only software for monitoring computers, phones and emails of the employees but also cameras, microphones, biometric devices, and GPS receivers. As the digitisation of work advances, the social and legal norms about privacy and surveillance at workplace are still in flux. And the national, European and international laws are slow to adapt to these technological changes.

As the challenges of workplace surveillance become more apparent, it is clear that the patchwork legislation does not adequately meet the needs of European workers who do not want to completely forgo their privacy at work. The current legal and political framework favors corporate interests, undermines the right to privacy, and perpetuates gender inequality and other forms of discrimination. We need to explore the impact of technology on power relations at work to ensure that workers' rights are adequately protected in the digital age.

  continue reading

28 episodes

Artwork
iconShare
 
Manage episode 213213814 series 2400674
Content provided by re:publica. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by re:publica or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.
Do you have to abandon your right to privacy every morning at the doors of your workplace? Can your employer monitor private chats with your family? Based on research projects at the Centre for Internet and Human Rights, we will unpack the issue of digital surveillance at work and discuss regulatory gaps and potential policy responses.
  • Kilian Vieth
  • Joanna Bronowicka

If you work in Europe, your privacy at the workplace might depend on the upcoming ruling of the the European Court of Human Rights in the Barbulescu case. Barnulescu was a Romanian engineer fired in 2007 for chatting online with his fiancée at work. Due to be issued this year, the ruling will define the meaning of privacy at work for employees in the 47 countries that have ratified the European Convention of Human Rights.

In the decade since Barbulescu was fired, the pace of technological change has accelerated. Today, the technologies used to supervise employees at work include not only software for monitoring computers, phones and emails of the employees but also cameras, microphones, biometric devices, and GPS receivers. As the digitisation of work advances, the social and legal norms about privacy and surveillance at workplace are still in flux. And the national, European and international laws are slow to adapt to these technological changes.

As the challenges of workplace surveillance become more apparent, it is clear that the patchwork legislation does not adequately meet the needs of European workers who do not want to completely forgo their privacy at work. The current legal and political framework favors corporate interests, undermines the right to privacy, and perpetuates gender inequality and other forms of discrimination. We need to explore the impact of technology on power relations at work to ensure that workers' rights are adequately protected in the digital age.

  continue reading

28 episodes

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