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CIO June 1, 2002 Ken Segarnick |
Courts Say It's OK: Peep Away Readers' questions about the legal consequences of electronic monitoring: What rights, if any, does an employee have in protecting his privacy in the workplace?... Can the company access my personal AOL account?... etc. |
Entrepreneur August 2003 Nichole L. Torres |
I Spy Workplace surveillance is coming to small and midsize businesses. |
Popular Mechanics January 2008 James Vlahos |
Surveillance Society: New High-Tech Cameras Are Watching You Advanced monitoring systems are proliferating around the country. |
CIO March 1, 2001 Matt Villano |
IT Autopsy No longer an obscure component of network security, computer forensics has blossomed into a science all its own... |
T.H.E. Journal January 2008 Julie Sturgeon |
CSI: Hard Drive Hate groups, terrorist activity, pimping. A day in the life of local law enforcement? No, just a routine sweep of school computers. Digital forensic technology is uncovering the bad, sometimes criminal behavior students and faculty are guilty of. |
PC World December 27, 2002 Stephen Lawson |
Yes, You Are Being Watched At home and in the office--and everywhere in between--you could be under legal digital surveillance. |
PC Magazine November 1, 2006 Robert Lemos |
Watching the Watchmen Most companies monitor their employees in some way, but is corporate Big Brother going too far? |
T.H.E. Journal December 2002 Katie Garza |
School Security Moves Into the Digital Age While VHS-based surveillance technology and real-time closed-circuit TV monitoring are widely used in schools today, several districts in Texas and Oklahoma have taken their surveillance systems into the digital age. |
Entrepreneur January 2006 Jane Easter Bahls |
Mail Call It might seem Big Brother-like for you to monitor employee e-mail, but there may be good reasons for doing so. However, the most obvious legal concern is making sure you're not setting yourself up for an invasion-of-privacy claim. |
Military & Aerospace Electronics February 2008 Courtney E. Howard |
Smart Sensors Homeland security and military personnel increasingly rely on intelligent sensor technology for surveillance and electronic intelligence. |
Information Today July 16, 2013 Nancy K. Herther |
PRISM and the First Amendment: A Critical Issue Once Edward Snowden lands in some friendly country or decides to return to the U.S., we can hope that attention is again focused on PRISM and surveillance. So far, the responses from government officials have been less than stellar. |