Global Times

Europe firms must tell staff of checks on e-mails: court

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Companies must tell employees in advance if their work email accounts are being monitored, the European Court of Human Rights ruled on Tuesday in a landmark privacy case.

In a judgment in the case of a man fired 10 years ago for using a work messaging account to communicat­e with his family, the judges found that Romanian courts had failed to protect Bogdan Barbulescu’s private correspond­ence because his employer had not given him prior notice it was monitoring his communicat­ions.

The company had presented him with printouts of his private messages to his brother and fiancée on Yahoo Messenger as evidence of his breach of a ban on such personal use.

Barbulescu had previously told his employer in writing that he had only used the service for profession­al purposes.

The European court in Strasbourg ruled by an 11-6 majority that Romanian judges, in backing the employer, had failed to protect Barbulescu’s right to private life and correspond­ence. The court concluded that Barbulescu had not been informed in advance of the extent and nature of his employer’s monitoring or the possibilit­y that it might gain access to the contents of his messages.

The court also said there had not been a sufficient assessment of whether there were legitimate reasons to monitor Barbulescu’s communicat­ions. There was no suggestion he had exposed to company to risks such as liability in the case of illegal activities online.

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