We prevent computer problems
The iPad Hype: Much Ado About Nothing?
Apple Computers (yes, that is what it originally was) recently announced a new iPhone-like mobile computing device called the iPad. Unless you live in the most remote of Islands, I'm sure that is all you've heard or read about in the past week. As neat as many of its features are, it is still missing a lot. As with anything made by Apple, the hype get to you. While the tablet form factor has b...
Astaro Releases Free Edition for Small Businesses
Astaro Corporation, a leading network security vendor, recently announced the launch of the Essential Firewall edition of its flagship security solution Astaro Security Gateway (ASG), available for free to all organizations worldwide. The Essential Firewall edition is claimed to include all the necessary functionality that all organizations need to secure their networks and operate a successful bu...
Software Vendors Encourage Security Lapses
I am now convinced that computer software vendors, knowingly or otherwise, help perpetuate insecure computer practices. They do this by the ridiculous practice of pushing out updates through executable files which ninety-eight percent of the time will get blocked by the security software we encourage users to install on their systems. You get a notification that an update is available, and you cli...

Employee Surveillance on Steroids

Posted By: Daniel on May 28, 2009 in Cloud Computing, Email and Spam, Ethics, Security, Web Technology - Comments: 1 Comment »

So the other day I went to a conference on security and listened to a couple of rehashed arguments on why business owners should secure their networks, data and mobile devices. Pretty standard stuff. Then we got into the latest development in employee monitoring and surveillance technology and I found myself going “whoa”, can they really do that? Sad fact is, yes, employers can really strip you down to your bones in terms of keeping tabs on what you do at work.

How would you like to see a video of the web sites you visited, emails you sent and received, chats and instant messages, keystrokes typed, documents printed etc? There are tools available now that promise to “detail what an employee is doing every step of the way”. These tools are so advanced and detailed that they can answer questions like:

  • Which employees are spending the most time surfing web sites?
  • Who is spending time on shopping sites, sports sites or adult sites?
  • Which employees chat or use anonymous email services like Hotmail and Gmail?
  • Who is sending the most emails with attachments?
  • Which employees may be leaking company confidential information via removable media like flash drives, CDs and DVDs?
  • Which employees are printing sensitive documents?
  • Who is arriving to work late and leaving early? Who takes long lunch breaks?
  • What are my employees searching for on Google, Yahoo and MSN?

Now the question is, how does this affect employee morale and sense of privacy? I am not sure I would be comfortable working in an environment that actively monitors my every single move throughout a work day. For those working in a high security position, or in environments that mandate strong security compliance (like the federal government’s requirement for keeping records of transactions and communications), there may some justification for this kind of paranoid Big Brother activity. If the end result, however, is to minimize internet abuse, there are moderate software and hardware solutions that do a decent job of keeping time-wasting web sites of your network. I mean, when is it really necessary to know:

  • What web sites are being visited most frequently and who is spending the most time browsing the web? Are these web sites work-related?
  • Which employees are engaging in chat or instant messaging? Is it work-related?
  • Who is using Hotmail, AOL mail, Gmail or Yahoo mail to communicate sensitive documents?
  • What are employees searching for on Google, Yahoo, MSN and AOL?
  • Who is sending the most email with attachments and where is it going? What is contained in those attachments? Is the employee authorized to send out this information?
  • What are the top programs being run and are any of them non-work-related?
  • Which employees are playing games like Solitaire at work? How much time are they spending playing games?
  • Who is transferring the most files and what exactly are they sending out and to whom are they sending these files?
  • Who is saving confidential information to removable media like flash drives or CDs or DVDs?
  • Who is printing company sensitive files?
  • Who are the top violators of those keywords that indicate abuse (e.g.: sex, guns, gambling)
  • Which employees type the most?  Which type the least?
  • Which employees use the most network bandwidth and why?
  • Who is arriving at work late and leaving to go home early?
  • Who takes the most breaks throughout the day?

Internal espionage in corporate environments is nothing new. Many companies put systems in place to help prevent or uncover data loss by tracking users sending sensitive files as attachments or copying them to removable storage devices such as USB keys, iPods, or CDs. So if you work in a major corporation that can afford killer internal employee monitoring software, you may want to be careful about those “business” emails to your massage therapist.

Post to Twitter Tweet This Post

Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

One Response

You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed.

You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.

  1. Travis says:

    Employee monitoring software use may be controversial, however it is necessary in several organizations. How many employees waste time during their work hours reading their personal emails, sneaking in their personal Facebook or Twitter account, instant messaging with friends or playing games? It’s sad for the disciplined who check their own emails once in a while, but there are situations where such monitoring systems must be deployed to avoid laziness and unproductivity.

Leave a Reply

Spam Protection by WP-SpamFree

Powered by 7feeds

Categories

Archives

© 2010 Tech Prognosis. All Rights Reserved | Designed By Appchain