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BY NOW everyone knows that the boys in IT can read every e-mail we send from
our corporate accounts. However, meticulously using web e-mail to keep your
job-hunting a secret becomes pointless the moment you press print. Up to 70
per cent of office workers are prepared to peek at private papers left on
office printers. The research, by Canon UK (which counts printers among its
products) also shows that 18 per cent of respondents saw sensitive personnel
records — home addresses, salary details, the lot — this way.
Shuffling through someone else’s private papers is one thing, but job hunters
are increasingly facing the prospect of having someone rummage around inside
their heads, according to Human Resources (May). Nemesysco,
an Israeli technology company, has developed a polygraph that can help
recruiters to check whether the eager candidate with a great CV is actually
a drug-using knicker-thief who is not averse to taking the odd backhander
from suppliers.
Which, perhaps, they use to fund their internet gambling habit. A million
people a year take part in regular online betting sessions, reports
www.personneltoday.com; and some of them do it at work, which can lead to
all sorts of problems and possibly some finger-pointing at HR (“I told you
we should have bought that lie detector but nooo, you insisted on getting
all employees their own private printer”).
Tell-tale signs of a gambling addiction include “persistent lateness or
absenteeism and excessive use of the telephone or rest rooms”. These signs
may also indicate that you have recruited a 15-year-old girl.
Talk of teenagers leads naturally to talk of allowances, although BusinessWeek
(May 8) is more interested in corporate credit cards and expense
accounts than in how many pairs of shoes bought in a year is reasonable. The
magazine reports that accounts departments are now using techniques such as
data mining to keep A Very Close Eye on what receiptful employees claim back
in costs.
The US Government isn’t exactly feeling the trust at the moment either. In a
separate story, BusinessWeek reports that anti-terror laws could
allow the Justice Department to snoop on corporate goings-on by bugging
boardrooms or tapping CEOs’ cellphones. Or they could just stand by the
office printer and see what comes out.
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