Will Your Employer Start Checking Your Pulse At Work?

from the buhdump,-buhdump dept

Over the years, several companies have experimented with high-tech ways of closely monitoring the actions of their employees, but it’s never been clear that this does much good. In addition to the direct cost of whatever technology is used, it can also breed resentment among employees who aren’t crazy about the fact that they’re always being monitored. One company is hoping to find a market for a system that will constantly measure the heart rates of all of a company’s employees. The idea is that if someone’s heart rate spikes dramatically, it’s a sign that something serious is occurring. Perhaps they’re being robbed, or maybe they’re committing a crime themselves. The company believes its primary customers will be places like casinos and banks, which have very high security needs and a number of customer-facing employees. Again, though, this technology seems certain to make employees uncomfortable, since nobody will be eager to wear a bracelet constantly measuring their pulse. It also seems likely that the system will be plagued by false alerts. Heart rates can jump around for a number of reasons, and it will be a waste of resources if security teams spring into action every time an employee gets excited.


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Comments on “Will Your Employer Start Checking Your Pulse At Work?”

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28 Comments
security (user link) says:

We are already getting inquiries about this

All hi tech has to begin somewhere

The idea holds promise, as as the technology is developed, it will be more efficient and productive
(remember the very early computers)

It will essentially monitor many bodily functions and factor in what is normal for that person.

Is a sudden, sharp deviation occurs that is very much out of the norm – Security guards may be alerted or Security Cameras may send remote alert signals to the premises watchers

This would be advantagous for bank tellers or cashiers of merchandise of a high value etc.

Nasty Old Geezer says:

Re: We are already getting inquiries about this

It would be be advantagous for the security guards too, they can monitor the cleavage on the secutity cams just by following the jumps in heart rates as the cute girls walk around.

Seriously — if my employer made this crap a condition of employment, I will tell them to go “Cheney” themselves.

Anonymous Coward says:

But realistically, there’s lots of evidence that a person can train themselves to conciously control their heartrate. And undoubtedly one of the cost justifications of a system like this is to pare down security headcount by using fewer guards and focusing on probables flagged by the monitoring system. But if you can generate lots of false positives (send in a herd of strippers and watch all the hetero males rates spike) or if you can suppress your own heart rate, a system like this is less secure than just having a lot of random observant eyes roaming around. And the cost of implementation, coupled with the increased cost of labor (you’ll have to pay more to get people to wear a monitor when other places aren’t requiring it) seems like it would only make it worthwhile for businesses with a big chance of getting hit for a big loss by a single employee incident, but those same businesses give crooked employees a pretty good incentive to devise extreme means to defeat their security.

Prophet says:

Controlled Breathing

I may not be a fitness buff but i do make my way to the Gym at least twice a week and i know for a fact that you can directly control your heartrate by breathing deeply and slowly. When i’m on the treadmill (which has a Heart Rate Sensor) and my HR gets to high if you breathe deeply and slowly i can lower my HR by 10-15 BPM. So this is kind of Pointless. PLus what about when Your a programmer ( which i have been) and your code modlue blows up for the Fifth time and you can figure out why, i know my HR has pumped form that.

Anonymous Coward says:

Good grief, heart monitoring? What are they trying to do, make us the living dead when it comes to doing our jobs? There are honestly things I get excited about during my job, and it doesn’t mean I’m NOT doing my job. For that matter, hooking people up to a heart monitor system for no good reason would get said people’s hearts pumping all by itself. A system like this would never prove useful in any way, shape, or form.

Fortunately, the company I work for is not like this. At most, they block a lot of non-work-related websites while also logging anything that goes in or out of the firewall, and enforce disciplinary measures if an employee is wasting their time and not getting work done on a regular basis. Our domain administrators are not even able to access users’ Exchange mailboxes without due cause, due to privacy restrictions enforced by our auditors.

DCX2 says:

That Girl

Yeah, but think about what that does for the morale of the guys. She just turned a shitty day into a good day – and maybe I’ll be more productive now because of it.

Sometimes, I wish women would understand that their beauty can be effective in causing other people happiness, and that they can do it without looking like a slut if that really bothers them.

Though, it appears like the new generation of girls these days has no problem looking skanky.

chaz says:

heart rate

I had on a heart monitor for training -bike races but I kept it on for two days. It would go off if the phone rang, if my attention was directed, if I thought somthing might be important. I asked the doctor about this and he said nobody goes around with this all day because it just goes off for any thing that grabs your attention. Add this to a list of stupid things.

alternatives says:

Heart rate monitors

seem to use the same wireless frequency and odds are this system would be wireless also.

Strikes me that one could create a transmitter that would ‘show a spike’ in one area, cause the security staff/attention to be drawn to one location while others in another location do whatever they are looking to do.

Or just the ‘fun’ of knowing the apes in the control room would be in a panic.

|333173|3|_||3 says:

If I read TFA right, the idea is that chasiers in casinos and so on use it, so that if thier hear rate goes up the security guard knows he need to look at that particukr monitor, and more importantly, listen to that microphone, to find out what is going on, rather than just watching for cheaters. It also tells them which strip show is the most interesting at the time, based on the reactions of the security there (unless they hav women bartenders in a gay show)

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