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Employee Crime and Employee Monitoring Ryan Gray Eric Van Horn
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Roadmap Employee crime Sabotage Employee monitoring Laws and cases Case study Conclusion
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Employee Crime Embezzlement and company sabotage With the use of computers, employees have stolen hundreds of thousands from employers. Some cases in the millions or even hundreds of millions of dollars. Insurance companies have employees create fake policies. Some steal data to sell to competitors.
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Increased opportunity for embezzlement The complexities of modern financial transactions increase the opportunities. Victims of most costly scams include: Banks Brokerage houses Insurance companies Other large financial institutions
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Sabotage Fired or angry employees sometimes sabotage the company computer systems. Motivations for sabotage are not new. What is new with computer sabotage is the ease with which saboteurs can cause a great amount of damage.
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Protecting against frauds Many practices reduce the likelihood of large frauds. Responsibilities of employees with access to sensitive computer systems are rotated. Each employee should have their own user ID and password. Access control. Immediate cancelation of access after an employee quits or is fired. Careful screening and background checks on potential employees can be helpful
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Employee monitoring “Technology now allows employers to cross the line from monitoring the work to monitoring the worker. - Cindia Cameron Monitoring employees is nothing new. Computers have made new kinds of monitoring possible.
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Employee monitoring cont’d Surveillance cameras Telephone recordings Keystroke loggers GPS monitoring E-mail
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Law and cases There is little law controlling workplace monitoring The Electronic Communications Privacy Act (ECPA) Prohibits interception of e-mail and reading of stored e-mail without a court order Does not prohibit employers from reading employee e-mail on company systems Does this seem ethical?
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Law and cases cont’d Courts place much weight on he fact that the computers, mail, and phone systems used at work are the property of the employer Are provided for business purposes only Courts sometimes rule against employers If there is a convincing case that monitoring was done to snoop on personal activities Track down whistleblowers Decisions depend on a conclusion about whether an employee had a reasonable “expectation of privacy” This concept is not always clear
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National Labor Relations Board Sets rules and decides cases about worker-employer relations Workers have legal right to communicate with each other about work conditions May do so on company systems in some cases Companies must discuss policies Use of surveillance cameras Drug testing Lie detector tests
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Case Study Headline: FDA staffers sue agency over surveillance of personal email. Beginning in 2012 Allegedly, FDA began to read personal emails of 5 employees Gained Access through keyloggers and email interception
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Allegations by employees 5 Doctors and scientists involved Employees claim FDA was approving radiological devices that posed unacceptable risks to patients Internal complaints were filed in 2007 FDA read and disclosed personal emails addressed to members of Congress
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Formal Lawsuit The employees filed a formal lawsuit citing a violation of their constitutional rights. They argue viewing their personal, not company, email is unconstitutional. FDA had to right to hold information over the employees head
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Positive and Negative rights Negative The right to act without interference Leave me alone Positive The right to allow or oblige action Rights guaranteed by laws
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StakeHolders FDA officials Employees Doctors and Scientists Public Patients with cancer
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FDA standpoint Employees of the FDA have “no reasonable expectation of privacy” while using company computers. FDA has the positive right to invade privacy Protect FDA name Continue to advance cancer research Information leaks undermine FDA efforts They assert the employees broke the law, not the FDA
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Employee standpoint Employees have the negative right to correspond with Congress without interference Whistle Blower protections Government correspondence is especially private Employees have positive right to oblige action from the law FDA should be punished for invading personal email
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Public standpoint Public has the negative right to receive the treatment they desire Risks of new technologies is their right to take Utilitarian belief supports this view Possible sacrifice of people is for the overall greater good Kantian belief grossly opposes this view By approving these devices, the FDA is using the public as means to an end
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Outcomes Investigation is still on going Being overseen by the Department of Health and Human Services. Of the 5 involved 1 fired 2 didn’t have contracts renewed 2 claimed they were passed over for promotion and quit
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Solutions Solutions could go in three ways Favor FDA Favor Employees Favor the public Indirectly the FDA What do you think????? Who has rights? Who violated laws?
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Conclusion Technologies used for employee monitoring Technologies used to commit employee crime Case study Ethical analysis
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References A Gift of Fire http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/01/30/fda-email- monitoring-lawsuit_n_1240846.html http://www.washingtonpost.com/world/national-security/fda-staffers- sue-agency-over-surveillance-of-personal-e- mail/2012/01/23/gIQAj34DbQ_story.html
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