GPS:
GROWING PRIVACY SCARE.
GPS is
ubiquitous. I use it to track my walks, runs, and bike rides. It
records my pace, total distance, altitude variations, and produces
a graphic map of my completed route. I can take iPhone pictures
along my route and tag points on the route to coincide with the
picture. I synchronize the data with a website that records all my
events in an quickly accessible data base. Of course, GPS is a new
necessity for many people, increasing from about 1/2 million to 15
million in just 4 years. All late model vehicles are equipped with
the units.
So, what
does this have to do with employment law? Maybe the answer will
come to you as you reflect on some micromanager in your career.
Maybe you can still hear one of his or her most used questions:
Where were you? or Where have you been? GPS provides the
answer.
Employment law is of course concerned about privacy in
the work place. The right of privacy turns on the general idea of a
person reasonably expecting to be left alone or unmonitored in
certain situations. The answer is never "one size fits all".
Privacy is unique to each environment and each person's role in
that environment. In the work environment, the employer can define
the limits of your expectations of privacy by disclosing to you
that your desk drawers or locker may be searched, or that your
email may be monitored, or that internet usage is to be for
business purposes only. Most information workers are aware that
their employer has an interest in protecting that information from
dissemination, and that security precautions are installed to
curtail theft or misuse of data. The Sarbanes-Oxley Act for example
requires precautions to be designed, installed, and policed to
prevent insiders from profiteering from sensitive market
information.
Before
GPS, I remember the favorite ploy of employers looking for a reason
to terminate an employee was to conduct an audit of his employment
expense sheets. With a few calls, a bill could eventually be found
that was inflated or not clearly related to work. Now, the employer
can make a stronger and even more convincing case by using GPS
tracking data to show an employee has lied about his whereabouts.
The reason is that GPS is not just real time, but historical. Think
of your iPhone, Blackberry, or your company vehicle's GPS as an in
flight "black box" that records a multitude of travel information.
To state the obvious, it tracks where you are. The System also
tracks where you were at all points on the route, your speed, your
braking patterns, and your signaling, and yes, the times of day
these events occurred. Your movements can be real time or later
monitored on a company computer. If a car is part of your
compensation, your "off-work" use of the vehicle will be monitored
too as a practical matter because you can't disable the factory
equipped system. Many computer applications now identify businesses
(restaurants, bars, hotels) located within a tight radius. Where
you likely spent your free time may be discoverable with a few
clicks by an intrusive employer. Don't assume that because you
rented a vehicle, your employer cannot obtain GPS tracking data
from the rental company. If your employer is paying the bill as the
designated customer, while you are only the designated driver, the
employer may obtain the tracking information from rental car
company.
So,
there is no bright line privacy protection test. Generally, where
you are paying all or part of the mobile phone bill or the rental
car fees, or providing your own transportation in your own vehicle,
and use the phone or vehicle for both business and personal use,
you will have a good argument that at specific times of day and for
specific personal uses, you privacy rights apply to refuse to
answer employer inquiries of "where were you?". But the converse is
true: when you're on company time and the company is paying for the
use of the phone or vehicle, you likely do not have an enforceable
privacy expectation, especially if the employer has put you on
written notice that your movements will be monitored.