Employee-Owned Devices Muddy Data Privacy Rights
snydeq writes "As companies increasingly enable employees to bring their own devices into business environments, significant legal questions remain regarding the data consumed and created on these employee-owned technologies. 'Strictly speaking, employees have no privacy rights for what's transmitted on company equipment, but employers don't necessarily have access rights to what's transmitted on employees' own devices, such as smartphones, tablets, and home PCs. Also unclear are the rights for information that moves between personal and corporate devices, such as between one employee who uses her own Android and an employee who uses the corporate-issued iPhone. ... This confusion extends to trade secrets and other confidential data, as well as to e-discovery. When employees store company data on their personal devices, that could invalidate the trade secrets, as they've left the employer's control. Given that email clients such as Outlook and Apple Mail store local copies (again, on smartphones, tablets, and home PCs) of server-based email, theoretically many companies' trade secrets are no longer secret.'"
I've kind of felt that personal devices like phones and such should be treated as extensions of your own mind. For example, they should be covered by the fifth amendment.
This means, from a trade secret standpoint, that transmission of the secret from your device to an unrelated third party should be treated as if you personally wrote out the trade secret and sent it. And if your device was hacked, it should be legally treated the same as if you were conned into revealing the trade secret. But you employer should have absolutely no rights with regards to examining what's on your device. It should be treated as a black box.
Need a Python, C++, Unix, Linux develop
No, COMPANY email is trade secret. Why are people paying their own money to buy hardware and software for work-use is beyond me. Sure the company won't buy you the latest shiny i-crap from grApple but is it worth it to get sued for breaking NDAs and industrial espionage? You want toys, you buy it yourself and use it for home and off-work.You want to work? Get your company to pay for it and return it to them when you leave the company. The end.