How Much Does The Job Of Corporate Email Reader/Snooper Pay?

from the sort-of-like-a-spy,-but-not dept

It’s no secret that plenty of big firms do track emails that are being sent by employees, to be able to look for leaks or spot questionable email behavior. And, indeed, a new study finds that 41% of the largest companies surveyed do employ people to analyze outbound emails, though that could just be looking over stats for anything suspicious. However, the report also notes that 22% of the companies employ people for whom this is their primary job — which suggests that at least some of those are basically sitting there all day scanning and reading the email of employees, looking for anything questionable. This seems fairly extreme. While I can understand the idea of having a system to go back and spot questionable emails if an investigation requires it, having full time staff scanning emails seems to be a clear indication that these companies simply don’t trust their employees. I recognize in a large corporation that you can’t trust all your employees, but that doesn’t seem like a good reason to spy on all of them. Do these companies also record all of their phone calls and listen to them? Or track what all the employees do when they leave the office?

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Comments on “How Much Does The Job Of Corporate Email Reader/Snooper Pay?”

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23 Comments
dennis call says:

Re: Treat them as you want them to be

Just dont write emails that will get you in trouble. Dont talk about company news, products and you wont have any problems. Cause the people reading your email dont care about who your dating or what your eating for dinner. And just so you people know, the government has been doing this sence 1990. Pre-WWW days..

-dennis

Franssu says:

Re: Treat them as you want them to be

You’re right. If I discovered my employer snooped on my emails/phonecalls, I’d immediately resign and sue their ass because if they spy on me, they have a legal obligation to tell me about it.

Oh, and I’d tell everyone about it, in an industry as small as the one I’m working in that would make their job of finding new employees very difficult.

Nasch says:

Re: Re: Treat them as you want them to be

Why do you think it’s illegal for them to read the email you send using company equipment, software, and networks, whether they tell you about it or not? Phone calls are specifically protected by certain laws, but AFAIK that is not the case with email. Do you know otherwise?

Daniel says:

Email Archiving

I work for a company that has the does the archiving of emails for large companies. They do it because the government says they have to. Also because if some one is defrauding a company or a customer it can be taken to court as proof. They also do not look at every email. Normally a percentage or they have certain words that cause an email to be flagged. Some of our clients are using up Tb of data a month. you cannot possibly read all of that email.

Eric Fredericksen says:

What's in a name???

Ok first of all. Corporate email systems are usually set up for the employee to conduct business relevant to the companies interests. We all know that is not what happens. Corporations can be held liable for anything you (the employee) do while using their email messaging system. So in their defense, It is simply a loss prevention practice. With that having been said, Who the hell proof reads these online articles. With a headline like “How Much Does The Job Of Corporate Email Reader/Snooper Pay?” I would have expected to learn at least a little bit about what a email snooper gets paid. I guess i’m just a stickler.

LMR2020 (profile) says:

::insert cliche Big Brother comment here::

I just recently left a firm that not only monitored our e-mails but was very upfront about the fact that they also monitored our phone calls. I never used their e-mail or their phones for personal business, mainly because I didn’t care for my employer knowing any more about my personal life than necessary. Seems pretty simple to me, but I’m old school…

bobbknight says:

It's Logical

Think Mike, this is just a natural extension of the nanny state that we ourselves have created.
Laws and court decisions with the force of law practically removing liability from the individual and placing it on the institution and or corporation. Sex discrimination, sex harassment, age, religion, ethnicity, race, the list grows at a near geometric rate.
With the health care environment, and being sued at the sneeze of a goldfish, if I were a company, I to would be paranoid of my workers.
One case in point, I recently had to go through my Grandmothers old possessions, in them I found many items from when she went to school, in grade 6 she was doing thing that a collage grad would have trouble doing today.
The point of this is that we are dummying down to the point of mediocrity in everyday life. We can not fire an inept educator because the teachers union will sue us and he has tenure.

CJ says:

@Franssu, they probably do tell you, it’s called acceptable use policy. Most people just never read all that boring terms and conditions verbiage. I can’t remember ever using a computing network owned by another entity (university, corporation) that didn’t have a clause in the acceptable use about having rights to monitor use and data or mail sent from the accounts they own.

Nasch says:

Phone calls and personal time?

It seems quite disingenuous to throw in that question about monitoring phone calls and tracking what employees do outside of work time. I don’t know the details of wiretapping laws, but my understanding is there are tight restrictions on when anybody can monitor or record phone calls without permission. I’m not sure it’s legal at all without a court order. Technically, any company could hire people to follow their employees around as long as they’re in public places, but the expense, benefit, and invasiveness of that puts it in a whole different category than monitoring emails.

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