Albuquerque Journal

How employers can remotely monitor you

- BY DON LEE

Since the pandemic and the rise in people working from home, employers’ use of employee-monitoring programs has been growing rapidly.

Employers say they’re tracking workers’ activity mainly to promote security and to boost productivi­ty. What monitoring tools they use and how aggressive­ly they use them vary widely. But the practice has alarmed unions and privacy advocates.

Makers of monitoring software report booming sales, and their products run the gamut in terms of capabiliti­es. One common feature is that they allow employers to track and collect data on workers’ devices without users’ knowledge.

That may put employers on a slippery slope as far as privacy and trust issues are concerned. But in a sampling of employee-monitoring software programs, digital rights group Electronic Frontier Foundation found nine out of the 10 products it reviewed could be made invisible to the people being monitored. Because the software is installed on company computers, workers who object may have limited options beyond complainin­g or finding another job. Here are some ways companies are monitoring workers at home:

TRACKING WORK TIME ON THE COMPUTER:

Clocking you in and out may be the most basic function, logging your hours worked, times idle and other gaps in the workday. Employers say it can help identify overwork or burnout if workers are spending too much time at their desks.

Conversely, a time-tracking system may prompt you when your computer has been inactive for a period, and if you don’t respond, it will automatica­lly log you off, which could affect your pay at some companies.

LOGGING KEYSTROKES:

Also called keylogging, this tool can let administra­tors know not only how many keystrokes are typed, but everything that’s actually typed, even deleted letters and words. Covert keylogging is one way hackers can gain access to passwords and other personal informatio­n. For bosses, snooping on every keystroke an employee performs can get pretty boring fast, but it may be useful in detecting those who spend a lot of time chatting and not working.

MONITORING WEBSITES, APPS AND EMAILS:

Are you looking at websites that have nothing to do with work? Do you have a game running in the background or are you actually playing it? How much time are you spending on social media?

Monitoring internet activity is a common feature of most monitoring software, although there are varying degrees of access that an employer may have. Some may be interested only in knowing how much time you spent on instant messaging; others may want to know what you were talking about.

GRABBING SCREENSHOT­S FROM THE COMPUTER:

It’s a standard feature: capturing snapshots of what users have up on their screens at any moment or at set intervals. Managers can even create a slideshow that provides a summary of an employee’s workday in images.

Some employers allow users to delete a screenshot before bosses can see it.

ACTIVATING WEBCAMS:

This may be the most invasive way of keeping tabs on workers, whether viewed live or by recording video or sounds.

Electronic Frontier Foundation found that only two of the 10 programs it reviewed offered this feature. And some monitoring software suppliers say it’s a step too far.

“Especially with people working from home with their children and their families, employers don’t need to be staring at you or your home,” says InterGuard CEO Elizabeth Harz.

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