Against Employer Dumpster Diving for E-Mail

Michael Z. Green
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引用次数: 2

Abstract

Recent attorney-client privilege cases offer a modern understanding of reasonable expectations of employee privacy in the digital age. Employees have increasingly made electronic mail communications to their attorneys via employer-provided computers or other digital devices with an expectation of privacy and confidentiality. Historically, courts have summarily dispensed with these matters by finding that an employer’s policy establishing clear ownership of any communications made through employer-provided devices eliminates any employee expectation of privacy in the communications and waives any viable privacy challenges to employer review of those communications. Nevertheless, within the last couple of years, several cases involving employee assertions of attorney-client privilege protection in e-mails sent on employer-provided devices suggest new thoughts about reasonable workplace privacy expectations. As employees must communicate through employer-provided digital devices day and night, these attorney-client privilege cases help expose the fallacy of assuming employees cannot reasonably expect that e-mails will remain private if employer policies mandate the communications are not private. These new cases and related ethics opinions about privileged e-mail offer a modern lens through which one may now view employee privacy expectations under a new paradigm that replaces the facade of assuming employees have no expectation of privacy due to employer policies. Digital age expectations regarding employee use of smart cellular phones, portable laptops, and other employer-provided devices to make communications beyond standard work hours leaves little expectation or opportunity for employees to reasonably communicate privately and confidentially by any other means than through these employer-provided devices. As a result, this article asserts that employer efforts to mine their devices for employee e-mails after disputes ensue comprises a form of electronic dumpster diving that should not be tolerated by courts, legislatures, or attorney ethics committees.
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反对雇主在垃圾箱里翻找电子邮件
最近的律师-客户特权案件提供了对数字时代员工隐私合理期望的现代理解。雇员越来越多地通过雇主提供的电脑或其他数字设备与他们的律师进行电子邮件通信,以期保护隐私和保密。从历史上看,法院通过发现雇主对通过雇主提供的设备进行的任何通信建立明确所有权的政策,消除了雇员对通信隐私的任何期望,并放弃了雇主对这些通信审查的任何可行的隐私挑战,从而简单地免除了这些问题。然而,在过去几年中,几起涉及雇员在雇主提供的设备上发送的电子邮件中主张律师-客户特权保护的案件表明,人们对合理的工作场所隐私期望有了新的看法。由于员工必须日夜通过雇主提供的数字设备进行通信,这些律师-客户特权案件有助于揭露一种谬论,即如果雇主的政策要求通信不保密,员工就不能合理地期望电子邮件将保持隐私。这些关于特权电子邮件的新案例和相关的道德观点提供了一个现代的视角,通过这个视角,人们现在可以在一个新的范式下看待员工的隐私期望,这个范式取代了假设员工由于雇主政策而没有隐私期望的表象。数字时代期望员工在标准工作时间之外使用智能手机、便携式笔记本电脑和其他雇主提供的设备进行通信,这使得员工几乎没有期望或机会通过雇主提供的设备以外的任何其他方式进行合理的私下和保密通信。因此,这篇文章断言,在纠纷发生后,雇主在他们的设备上挖掘员工电子邮件的努力,构成了一种电子垃圾搜索的形式,不应该被法院、立法机构或律师道德委员会所容忍。
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