Dutch employers may monitor workers...

Source: IGG.net

For those working in the Netherlands and downloading some pr0n and MP3's, and mail their mum's in their bosses time, we've got some bad news:



Dutch employers have every right to track their workers' online habits, according to a statement from the country's data protection authority, the Registratiekamer, released Monday. The Registratiekamer said it received many questions from employers, works councils, and employees about the monitoring of e-mail and Internet usage at work. "Employers want to know whether they are allowed to track their workers. They were happily surprised to hear they are," said Rudy Schreijnders, spokesman for the Registratiekamer.

About half of the working population in the Netherlands now has access to the Web and e-mail at the workplace, consulting firm KPMG Holding concluded in a recent study. The Registratiekamer acknowledges the advantages of these new means of communication, but notes recent incidents have shown their negative sides.

The data protection authority published 17 guidelines for employers in its latest study of the topic. Most important is the setting of clear rules for use of the Internet, which should be approved by the work council and published so that all workers have easy access to them. The Registratiekamer said private and work e-mail should be separated, but if this is impossible the employer should make an effort to disregard private e-mail when scanning employee in-boxes.

Where possible, illegal uses of the company network should be blocked by software rather than relying on employees to observe the rules. Logged data should not be kept longer than necessary: the Registratiekamer suggests retaining records of e-mail and Internet traffic for a month. "Companies want to control the use of e-mail and Internet, compare it to a photocopier and the telephone. Reasonable personal use will always be accepted; long international calls and hundreds of photocopies will not," said Schreijnders.

U.K. insurance company Royal & SunAlliance last week sacked 10 employees and suspended 77 others after they were caught sending around smutty pictures of cartoon character Bart Simpson. In December an English law firm was embarrassed when an e-mail exchange between an employee and his girlfriend about their sexual adventures became one of the Net's most widely circulated e-mail jokes.

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