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How to stop your boss spying on you, as European Court rules bosses can read messages

Your employer has the right to look in on your messages — here's what to do if that makes you feel uneasy

Andrew Griffin
Wednesday 13 January 2016 16:22 GMT
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The DWP denies owning the IP addresses associated with the ISIS-linked accounts
The DWP denies owning the IP addresses associated with the ISIS-linked accounts (Getty)

A European court case has once again highlighted that you might be getting snooped on by your employer — and you might not even know it.

Many employers have the right to look in on the communications of their employees, and might not even necessarily need to tell them, experts have said.

But there are some ways of hiding information away from your employer — extreme though they might be.

The main thing to do is to ensure that your work devices and your personal ones don’t get mixed up. To be most safe, you should be sure that there is nothing on your work device that isn’t work, and vice versa — even having your work email app on your phone means that it could be used for work, and potentially blurs the boundary.

The second is to ensure that any communications you do on that device is kept in apps that you don’t use for work. Some software, such as Slack, can be used for both work chats and personal ones — but mixing them up means that you’re using professional equipment for personal chats, and that your boss might end up reading them.

Many apps — including iMessage, WhatsApp and Telegram — encrypt their messages, so that they can only be read on the device sending them and the device reading them.

But encryption doesn’t do anything if your boss has access to the device that the messages were sent using. So, for instance, you might be using Telegram to stop your messages being intercepted — but if you’ve got the app open on your desktop then all your boss needs to do is to open up your computer.

It’s also important to make sure that if you really want to stay off the grid as far as your bosses are concerned, don’t use their WiFi. It isn’t clear how far the definition of equipment for work goes — but wireless networks could easily be considered as counting within it.

If you feel like you need to take any of these steps, then it might be worth consulting your employee handbook and your IT department to ask — if not your managers themselves. They don’t have to have told you in advance that they are monitoring messages, according to experts.

Your employer doesn’t need to give you warning before looking in on your messages. "Within the UK you can conduct monitoring without employee consent," Paula Barrett, partner and head of privacy, at Eversheds told The Independent.

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