Feds: Your Employer Can't Stop You From Recording Conversations At Work (huffingtonpost.com) 139
schwit1 writes with news about a ruling by the National Labor Relations Board about your right to record conversations at work. The Huffington Post reports: "If you're looking to catch your boss breaking labor law, that smartphone in your pocket might be your best friend, thanks to a new ruling from federal officials. On Thursday, the National Labor Relations Board ruled that upscale grocer Whole Foods cannot forbid employees from recording conversations or taking photographs at work without a supervisor's permission. (Local laws, however, could still come into play in certain situations, as several states require the consent of two parties in order for a conversation to be recorded legally.) At the center of the case were stipulations in Whole Foods' 'General Information Guide,' an employee manual laying out worker do's and don'ts. The guide prohibited workers from taking photos or recording conversations inside a store 'unless prior approval is received' from a manager or executive, or 'unless all parties to the conversation give their consent.'"
Signs of evil. (Score:1)
There are certain things we need to admit are signs that you are not just a dick, but a criminal dick.
Any company attempting to prevent employees from recording them should by law, instantly trigger a full regulatory audit - everything from the IRS to OSHA.
If you try to stop your employees from telling on you, something's major league wrong with the way you run your company.
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It would be pretty embarrassing if the recording about "We're going to put two spears of asparagus in a bottle of water, and charge $6 for it!" were to go public.
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Sure, but only if the regulatory law is sane to begin with. Also, accusers should have to present evidence. No guilty until proven innocent style witchhunts.
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Just not in Maryland (Score:2)
Only exception is recording the police who have no reasonable expectation of privacy when out in public performing their official duty.
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You probably consented when you read the documentation that came with the device, connected it to the 'net, and made use of it. I've yet to see anything that did that sort of thing that didn't specify it in your agreement. Your use constitutes both understanding and agreement. Your recourse is to not use it in the first place. Your best option is, if you wish to avoid it, not to buy one in the first place.
The onus is on you to read, understand, and agree to usage policies prior to use. You're probably not g
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Interesting... How do you prove it?
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Reasonable doubt is a defense. "Would a reasonable person believe that the evidence indicates the accused is guilty of the crime as is alleged by the State?"
So, with some thinking... What I'd think would *likely* be the best route (and I am not a lawyer but I am quite interested in matters of law) would be an accusation of a civil offense.
The difference in a civil and criminal trial, where criminal charges include a potential penalty that results in loss of freedom, is the burden of proof. I'm not very arti
(Local laws, however, could still come into play) (Score:5, Informative)
This one line from the summary shouldn't be ignored: "(Local laws, however, could still come into play in certain situations, as several states require the consent of two parties in order for a conversation to be recorded legally.)"
Here's a map of 'eavesdropping' (recording) laws by state:
http://www.vegress.com/can-i-r... [vegress.com]
Washington, California, Nevada, Montana, Michigan, Pennsylvania, New Hampshire, Massachusetts, Rhode Island, Connecticut, Delaware, Maryland, and Florida all seem to require two-party notification before recording conversations, otherwise it's deemed as 'eavesdropping' and illegal.
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Addition:
I have no idea what happens if you're recording a phone call from a state that DOES allow only one party being notified to a state that does NOT.
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It's sort of a gray area with conflicting state rulings.
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No it's not. The party in the one-party state is free to record the conversation as the laws in their juridiction are single-party consent. The party in the all-party state must receive consent from all involved parties though this can be as simple as clearly informing all parties that the call is being recorded. Any party remaining on the call after is generally considered to have given consent as they were free to terminate the call IIRC.
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According to the link you posted, federal law applies when the call crosses state boundaries. That would make sense because federal law usually does apply to interstate transactions.
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Interestingly, while recording audio may require two-party consent, recording video without audio does not require two-party consent in most if not all jurisdictions. This is why security cameras are usually video only.
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A conversation recorded by one of its participants is never "eavesdropping". If that is the rationale used by those promoting two-party consent laws, then they either don't know what words mean, or they're deliberately trying to confuse people.
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Perhaps they mean that the recording device is a "third", undisclosed (and therefor eavesdropping) listener.
Remember when (Score:1, Insightful)
[...] ruling by the National Labor Relations Board about your right to record conversations at work.
Can anyone remember when laws were made by elected officials?
It seems like nowadays some federal agency steps in and declares that they're the governing authority on something, that their decisions are law, and everyone should obey.
That doesn't seem to mesh with what we were taught in school.
Aren't our lawmakers elected?
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It seems like nowadays some federal agency steps in and declares that they're the governing authority on something, that their decisions are law, and everyone should obey.
Yes because those federal agencies were created by Congress who then gave them the authority. The NLRB didn't pop into existence out of the ether.
Aren't our lawmakers elected?
Yes, and then they create agencies to which they delegate duties. Federal agencies are a new thing to you? Hate to break it to you but they've existed for over two hundred years.
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...Can anyone remember when laws were made by elected officials?...
Laws still are made by elected officials. Those elected officials made the laws that gave the power to the Federal agencies to issue rulings such as the one under discussion here.
That doesn't seem to mesh with what we were taught in school.
Your should have paid more attention.
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Seems like there's never quite enough attention to go around.
I tend not to blame my schooling—good, bad, or indifferent—over any scrap of misremembered misinformation that five quality minutes spent on Wikipedia puts into the shade.
Schooling needs to address bigger issues, such as just what a sorry state one needs to be in at the outset (i.e. most of us, on most subjects) before the beer goggles of profound ignorance cause Wikipedia to resemble a worthy first
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C'mooon, you still think you have any say in who's going to govern you?
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What exactly is the issue here? The creation of federal agencies is derived directly from the Constitution and backed up by 200 years of case law. The GP must have been quite a shitty teacher to not have learned about things such as the "Necessary and Proper Clause" along with the Supreme Court ruling in McCulloch v. Maryland.
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The GP must have *had* quite a shitty teacher
Fixing that for myself.
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What exactly is the issue here? The creation of federal agencies is derived directly from the Constitution
Well, the real actual issue is that the Constitution doesn't grant any kind of NRLB power to the Feds - that's a state problem, should States wish to deal with it (per the 10th Amendment). All the Founding Fathers, including Hamilton, wrote about the limitations of Congress's delegated powers before Ratification, it's discussed in the minutes of the Constitutional Convention, and all of them excepting
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Just because we aren't using it, doesn't mean we don't have the power. Only we can fix it. All that is required is the will. With that we can do anything.
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Fix what? Creating federal agencies and delegating them authority to regulate is a Constitutional power of Congress. Why do you and the GGP act as if this is somehow a new thing?
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We can elect a congress that will properly exercise its constitutional authority over these agencies. Is that really so difficult to understand? Or shall we just continue with the blame game?
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It seems your school did a crappy job. The LEGISLATIVE branch (Congress) makes laws. These people are elected. One of the LAWS they made was the National Labor Relations Act (1935). This Act created the NLRB. The Act was ruled Constitutional by the SCOTUS in 1937.
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It seems like nowadays some federal agency steps in and declares that they're the governing authority on something, that their decisions are law, and everyone should obey.
Because it is. Congress delegates authority [thefreedictionary.com] to executive agencies to handle the pesky details that congress doesn't want to deal with because they have important things to do like raise funds for their election campaigns. The courts have been fine with it so long as Congress spells out the limits and so long as the agency doesn't overstep their bounds. For this case, the NLRB has jurisdiction over private sector [wikipedia.org] labor disputes and so can make a ruling like they did. Still subject to local laws, as point
Delegated authority and separation of power (Score:5, Insightful)
Can anyone remember when laws were made by elected officials? It seems like nowadays some federal agency steps in and declares that they're the governing authority on something, that their decisions are law, and everyone should obey.
That is how it has been since the signing of the Constitution. The legislature makes laws, the executive branch makes regulations [wikipedia.org], and the judicial branch makes case law [wikipedia.org]. All three are types of law. Some are done by elected officials others aren't. All three are necessary components of a functioning legal system. Congress does not and never has passed laws that are fully fleshed out to every detail. And that's a good thing because Congress is clearly not filled with domain experts for most subjects. The legislature sets the framework and the executive branch makes it work. They delegate this authority to federal agencies who then issue regulations filling in the details. It has ALWAYS worked like this. ALWAYS.
That doesn't seem to mesh with what we were taught in school. Aren't our lawmakers elected?
Sounds like you got some bad schooling. Many lawmakers are elected in all three branches of government. Others are appointed. It's been that way since the dawn of the republic in the US.
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Do you think they just invented a right to record people? Strange how the grandstanding government hater thinks we need the government's permission to do something.
We have the right to record anything we damned well please. We're doing it constantly in our heads; fortunately technology gives us a way to do it that is permanent and non-repudiable.
We only restrict that right with laws in the interests of privacy, trade secrecy, copyright, etc.
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Do you even law bro?
This isn't creating a law or regulation. It's saying Whole Foods doesn't have the ability to create such regulations/laws on their own.
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Can anyone remember when laws were made by elected officials?
It seems like nowadays some federal agency steps in and declares that they're the governing authority on something, that their decisions are law, and everyone should obey.
That doesn't seem to mesh with what we were taught in school.
Aren't our lawmakers elected?
What you're referring to is known as the Doctrine of Nondelegability.
http://constitution.findlaw.co... [findlaw.com]
The SCOTUS has gradually all but destroyed any restrictions on the Congressional delegation of it's regulatory/lawmaking powers.
The rationale was that delegability was necessary in order to produce enough Federal laws & regulations quickly enough to be able to control through laws and regulations all the existing and emerging new areas of the economy and society at large that government felt itself enti
The Ag Gag Laws (Score:2)
They're a big thing here in Nawth Ca'lina where we have literally thousands of poultry and hog factories. And a hell of a lot of animal abuse too, by the way.
http://www.theatlantic.com/hea... [theatlantic.com]
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That's North Carolina, all right. But what does that have to do with an animal farm?
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And NC only requires any one of the primary parties of a conversation to consent to recording.
I.E. If you and I have a conversation, and I record it, its perfectly legal regardless of your opinion on the matter. So if you're doing something wrong, its is perfectly legal for me to secretly record you and then make it public as long as I'm a principal participant in the conversation. That means that if you and I are talking, I can record it ... but my wife sitting next to me and not involved, could not.
Ag
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And also, its North Cakalack or North Cakalacky, not Nawth Ca'lina. This isn't boston.
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They're a big thing here in Nawth Ca'lina where we have literally thousands of poultry and hog factories. And a hell of a lot of animal abuse too, by the way.
http://www.theatlantic.com/hea... [theatlantic.com]
That is the state making a law, which they can do. This case is an employer trying to prevent an employee from taping a conversation even though the law allows it and specifically banning taping as an act to prove that a supervisor told them to do something.
Slight difference.
I would love to (Score:1)
My manager used to record all the conversations (Score:2)
Is that so? (Score:2)
Even if you're employed by the government?
Just checkin'...
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Yes, even if you're employed by the government your boss can not violate federal law.
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Wrong again. The NLRB specifically only has jurisdiction over PRIVATE business and the USPS.
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And you are also incorrect, NLRB rulings can apply to federal workers, unionized on not.
An example: non-union workers of a unionized workplace. A unionized Federal Fire Department can have both GI and civilian emplyees. If the civilian union employees are granted something in the union contract (1-hour lunch break) then the GI must also be afforded the same. Or maybe after duty hours the civilians have negotiated the right to change into workout gear for wear around the station then the GI must also have
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Again it all depends on the law. No matter who the employer is they cannot enforce rules that are against the law.
Damned if you do, damned if you don't (Score:4, Interesting)
By letting the government make the ruling, the matter is settled and the company doesn't have to worry about liability either way.
This sort of thing is a good lesson for those who erroneously believe in absolutes (the tone of TFA is that there is a "right" and "wrong" answer to this). It is exceptionally rare for a single principle on any issue to always be correct. There is almost always a situation where that principle will be wrong because some other principle will overrule it. In this case, you have the right to privacy in the workplace butting heads with the right to publicize workplace abuses. I'm not sure what the correct balance is, and I'm not sure the government does either. But at least this way the company doesn't get caught in the crossfire. All a company has to do is comply with the government ruling, and the fight over the correct balance will bypass them and go straight to the courts. So even though Whole Foods lost the case, they still won.
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This is where property rights make things easy. It's the employers property so it should be their rules. The employee can choose to work their or not. If the rules are too draconian then you won't have good employees and your business suffers. The problem with a one size fits all solution is you have no idea if it is the preferred solution. With a market of ideas multiple ideas can exist and people can chose to live with those they like.
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Except as we've all learned, property rights mean jack and shit when the government gets involved. What, you think that deed that has your name on it makes that property yours? LOL, no, just refuse to pay your taxes and you'll find out exactly how quick you're wrong about that idea.
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I agree. I'm suggesting an easy way to figure these things out.
Re: Yeah and? (Score:2)
Also, regarding the drug tests and such, it's not mandatory, you can always just quit.
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Of course, in 'At Will' states... (Score:2)
There is nothing preventing the employer from not continuing to employ the person.
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Nah because they've played the great semantics game of sayin he didn't act like a whistleblower while simultaneously saying whistleblower laws didn't apply because he was a contractor. They rigged the rules where he loses either way.
Nice one (Score:2)
So it could be argued that i
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A couple of things: TFS appears to address audio recordings. The law in many states treats these differently from video. You have a right not to be audio recorded, but if you are in public (or perhaps an area open to observation by third parties) you can be photographed.
Many employers have policies that make the recordings made on the premises the property of the company. This may not apply in publicly accessible areas, where anyone can whip out a phone and snap a selfie in front of the produce. But get ca
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This ruling would seem to overrule such policies.
To prevent audio recording (Score:1)
Play really loud background music over the PA system. In the bathroom turn on the faucets and flush the toilets. Or maybe they can use EMP to zap your phone at the entrance. How are you going to prove they did it?
One Party States - Recording (Score:1)
Just live in a "one party state". This means you can record your personal conversations in most any setting, work included. Kentucky is a one party state.
but they can (Score:1)
but they can stop you from bringing your phone to work. A lot of companies do not allow cell phones in the workplace.
Re:Actually it's more complicated. (Score:4, Informative)
They can't "blanket" stop all circumstances where someone would be filming, that doesn't make all filming at work legitimate or legal though.
And yet the neither the summary nor the title said or implied any such thing. The summary even explicitly says in the fourth sentence:
(Local laws, however, could still come into play in certain situations, as several states require the consent of two parties in order for a conversation to be recorded legally.)
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This is a test- slashdot isn't letting me post in journals. It keeps logging me out. Could that be my ISP messing with me?
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Slashdot has been logging lots of users out so not your ISP. Some have suggested deleting all cookies related to slashdot as a fix.
Re:Actually it's more complicated. (Score:5, Informative)
The very headline implies just such a thing. The specific thing at issue in this case was the WF handbook banned recording of 'Team Meetings'. The NLRB found that PARTICULAR thing illegal, because 'team meetings' could include union organizing activities, and by law, the company can not interfere with those. This ruling in NO WAY bans ALL company prohibitions on recording, only ones that interfere with origanization activities. And that has nothing to do with any local laws.
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No it doesn't. It explicitly says "your employer".
Re:Actually it's more complicated. (Score:4, Informative)
Do you have a reading comprehension problem? The headline is WRONG. The ruling does NOT say your employer can not prohibit you from recording. The ruling says your employer can't issue a recording ban in such a way that would interfere with things protected by section 7 of the NLRA (unionization). It does NOT say they can't prevent you from recording ANYTHING ELSE.
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or that your employer is legally liable if certain customer information is compromised and banning recordings, photos, and videos is one way to secure that information.
In the course of video recording what you believe is corporate misconduct you could easily open yourself to liability and criminal charges if you captured the wrong thing and released it on facebook and youtube.
Re:Actually it's more complicated. (Score:4)
I'm not seeing the issue. The summary only says that your employer can't stop you. It doesn't say or imply that state law can't stop you.
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This is important. It is also important to remember that in almost every workplace there is video surveillance and everyone has consented to be recorded. Once you've consented to be on candid camera you've waived your personal right to refuse. It could also then be argued that every empl
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I'm not seeing the issue. The summary only says that your employer can't stop you. It doesn't say or imply that state law can't stop you.
And that is wrong, but in this case I'll give them a pass since the rest of the media also seems to be reading this ruling entirely wrong.
Here's the KEY phrase which nobody is paying attention to, from the actual ruling:
if employees are acting in concert for their mutual aid and protection and no overriding employer interest is present.
What the ruling was about was situations where the employees were recording potential misdeeds or illegal activity (related to unions, etc.) There are MANY situations where the employer has an obvious interest, such as protecting trade secrets or customer information.
And more to the point, i
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That makes more sense, thanks. I'd read it and I wasn't sure how they'd reached the conclusions they'd reached. My initial reading was that someone had concluded that you, an employee, could go right ahead and record inbound customer calls without it being company protocol to do so and without warning the customer that the call was being recorded.
A loser reading implied that the employee, in those circumstances, would be able to record proprietary things like that inbound telephone conversation and then be
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Your arms must get tired from confiscating cellphones from everyone around.
Who the hell actually wears a "wire" these days? You just start a new voice memo, lock the phone, and stick it back in your pocket.
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What does the UK have to do with this story? The NLRB is a US federal agency.
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More socialism from the administration of the Glorious Leader Obummer to ruin this once great Christian nation.
Sociallism, really. Can you please elaborate how this ruling has anything to do with Socialism?
Oh never mind you are one of those AC's that equate anything that strengthens worker's rights as Socialism, even though you have no clue what socialism is.
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Unions are not socialism. Unions do not advocate community control of production. The tie between socialism and Unions has been made by the Employers to discredit unions. Granted many union leaders have socialist tendencies but Unions do not have any explicit tie to socialism.
Socialism: a political and economic theory of social organization that advocates that the means of production, distribution, and exchange should be owned or regulated by the community as a whole.
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For the sake of argument, it might be plausible to assert that a union is a small community and that their work is to give the employees some control of things like production numbers, pay rates, employee rights, and similar things. That could be stretched, probably not beyond the breaking point, to say that the unions are advocating community control of production.
Granted, it's a rather limited subset of the community but community has several definitions and size isn't a requirement. It's also not hard to
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I fail to see what's socialistic about this. They are basically saying the employer cannot infringe on employee rights. If your boss is doing something that violates law; like making you work unpaid overtime....then you should have the right to gather proof. What? You think employer's should be able to abuse employees? You; a person who probably believes in
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My former employer had written in its employment agreement that they may record audio and video of... telephones, hidden cameras and microphones, computer activity, etc. They required you to sign an NDA that you can not discuss any aspect of your employment even after leaving the company, and you can't record audio or video on the premises. That's pretty fucked up even for being a major tire dealer/manufacturer/repair center that had major tire recalls, that I can't name because of the NDA. Major customer and employee screwing went on there.
You are posting as an AC, name away.