Is your boss looking for porn?

Don't help him find it, or it could be your job...

NEWS Ninety per cent of the largest US companies have procedures in place in case inappropriate or illicit images are discovered in the work place, and 50 per cent have had to use these procedures for incidents in the past year, according to a study released on Friday.

The report, sponsored by software company PixAlert and conducted by research firm Delta Consulting, also found that when businesses pursued an investigation, 44 per cent of cases resulted in a dismissal from the company.

The study is the latest to indicate that companies are keeping close track of employees in the work place. A report released earlier this month found that 63 per cent of corporations with 1,000 or more workers either employ or plan to employ staff to read or otherwise analyse outbound email. And according to a study earlier this year, the number of companies that monitor the amount of time employees spend on the phone and track the numbers called has jumped to 51 per cent, up from nine per cent in 2001.

Though liability and regulatory issues may be convincing companies to peek in on their employees, such surveillance raises privacy concerns. Employers can monitor workers to a greater degree these days, thanks to newer technologies such as keystroke-logging software and satellite global positioning systems that can track a mobile phone user's whereabouts.

The Delta Consulting-PixAlert report was designed to cover a cross-section of corporations that comprise the country's top 500 companies. Senior managers responsible for computer usage policies participated in the survey. A sample of 50 executives was interviewed.

Ed Frauenheim writes for CNET News.com

Comments

There are 3 comments. Join the discussion

  1. 1. anonymous

    Yes, and because of his porn questing we have to battle trojans, viruses, browser hijacks and spam... but you can't say anything or admit to finding evidence cos he's the boss!

    • 21 June 2005 11:27
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  2. 2. anonymous

    Isn't it sad that people of all ages and gender have to take their porn fantasys to work with them?Poor sad little people who can't do their jobs properly without seeing some sort of porn in front of them.I suppose the deviats have to hide somewhere incase the security services pick them up at home and their wifes / husbands /partners will then find out what they are in to.Sad that the boss has to spy on you as well just incase they find something they might like in the porn field.

    • 21 June 2005 17:51
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  3. 3. anonymous

    Yes and another male colleague both waste much of their time searching for and looking at porn. Like the other reader - this means an influx of degenerate spam; trojans, viruses, and every other IT headache you could imagine. Whatever happened to professionalism? Though I suppose it's merely the electronic version when, in earlier decades, individuals hung up nudie calendars in attempts to satisfy their strange urges.

    • 24 June 2005 10:24
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