T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
706.1 | Amazing. | AYOU46::D_HUNTER | This is my Personal_name! | Thu Jan 26 1989 08:01 | 15 |
| Jeffrey,
the only job I know of where such a situation exists
is selling advertising for newspapers. Tele-ad people phoning
round local firms/companies looking for business.
I presume you are not selling advertising and I cannot
think of any occaison where a boss should have the ability or
right to listen in on his/her employees phone conversations.
Frankly I am aghast at this. If it happened to me I would be
looking for another way for my manager to measure my performance
and if that failed I'd be looking for another job (prefereably
within DEC).
Good Luck,
Don H.
|
706.2 | | SA1794::CHARBONND | I'm the NRA | Thu Jan 26 1989 13:44 | 1 |
| re .0 Make your personal calls on a different phone
|
706.3 | You don't mention what your job is. | SYOMV::DEEP | My REAL node went virtual again! | Thu Jan 26 1989 15:22 | 1 |
|
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706.4 | | NEWS::HAKKARAINEN | It is the ought what counts | Thu Jan 26 1989 15:31 | 4 |
| 800-DIGITAL reports that the phone calls may be monitored for
``supervisory training purposes''. The message indicates that calls are
not recorded. Dunno if the operators know which calls are monitored. (I
supposed I should ask 'em.)
|
706.5 | The phone's not their for your personal convenience | DR::BLINN | Rule #5: There is no Rule 5. | Thu Jan 26 1989 15:44 | 18 |
| I would imagine the topic author works for DECdirect, although it
could be for any of a number of organizations.
This is related to the topic on "personal use of company phones",
and the answer suggested in an earlier reply (make your personal
calls from another phone, on your breaks) addresses the problem
completely. Another alternative is to seek a job in another
function where you would not be using the phone in the same way,
and where the group has different practices regarding monitoring
phone use.
I strongly suspect that there is no corporate policy that says
that your manager can't listen in on calls made using Digital's
telephone system, if there is a business justification for
doing so. After all, the phones are there for business use,
not for personal convenience.
Tom
|
706.6 | | COVERT::COVERT | John R. Covert | Thu Jan 26 1989 23:26 | 10 |
| > I strongly suspect that there is no corporate policy that says
> that your manager can't listen in on calls made using Digital's
> telephone system, if there is a business justification for
> doing so.
But there better be a good business reason. Unless you're in a job where the
way you deal with people over the phone is a major part of your evaluation, you
should not expect anyone to be listening in on your calls.
/john
|
706.7 | Legitimate vs. Abusive Monitoring | AKOV68::BIBEAULT | Bob, DTN 244-6136 | Fri Jan 27 1989 13:59 | 27 |
| We live in a country - and in a company - which respects the privacy
of the individual. This is especially true of phone conversations,
regardless of whether they are business or personal.
In law enforcement, wire taps cannot legally be put in place without
a court order. Further, one *supposedly* cannot obtain a court order
without probable cause. This is to protect the individual against
unwarranted invasion of privacy, consistent with our constitutional
rights.
A similar standard should exist for monitoring of phone conversations.
There should be a legitimate, documented business reason for monitoring
phone conversations. Except under circumstances where *probable
cause* type issues are involved, employees should be informed that
their phone conversations may be subject to monitoring.
Monitoring of phone conversations *can* have a legitimate business
purpose. At DecDirect, for example, it may be ensure that customer
calls are being handled courteously.
But such monitoring *could* be abused and should not be considered
to be the "right" of management to do at their whim. If policies
and procedures do not cover this area, perhaps they *should* address
it in order to preserve legitimate monitoring but protect employees
from abusive monitoring by supervisors...
|
706.9 | anyone can delete their own notes | CVG::THOMPSON | Notes? What's Notes? | Mon Jan 30 1989 17:06 | 5 |
| Yes .0 is gone. I assume that the author deleted it. Someone may
have pointed out that their management could see it if they use
notes. Hard to say.
Alfred
|
706.10 | Always some bad apples... 8-( | MISFIT::DEEP | Bring out yer dead...(clang!) | Wed Feb 01 1989 12:47 | 6 |
|
If their management is of a mindset to use telephone conversations
against them, they are probably inclined to use Notes conversations
against them as well.
(Sigh!)
|
706.11 | We don't know management's intent | DR::BLINN | Lead people, manage things -- G. Hopper | Wed Feb 01 1989 14:22 | 17 |
| Of course, there is a subtle difference between telephones and
Notes -- with telephones, unless the conversation is recorded,
it's difficult to *prove* what was said. With Notes (and MAIL),
there's a generally trusted "written record" (although there
are ways to "counterfeit" either, they are not trivially easy).
We don't even know that their management was of a mindset to use
telephone conversations against them -- at least, I don't recall
an assertion to that effect in the (now deleted) topic note.
Rather, their management notified them that management might
happen to listen in on *any* telephone conversation, and that
there was no assurance that a *personal* conversation would not be
overheard. That's pretty "up front", in my opinion.
Tom
Tom
|