The Visible Employee: Using Workplace Monitoring and Surveillance to Protect Information Assetss

The Visible Employee: Using Workplace Monitoring and Surveillance to Protect Information Assetss

The Visible Employee: Using Workplace Monitoring and Surveillance to Protect Information Assetss

The Visible Employee: Using Workplace Monitoring and Surveillance to Protect Information Assetss

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Overview

For business owners, managers, and IT staff interested in learning how to effectively and ethically monitor and influence workplace behavior, this guide is a roadmap to ensuring security without risking employee privacy or trust. The misuse of information systems by wired workers—either through error or by intent—is discussed in detail, as are possible results such as leaked or corrupted data, crippled networks, lost productivity, legal problems, or public embarrassment. This analysis of an extensive four-year research project conducted by the authors covers not only a range of security solutions for at-risk organizations but also the perceptions and attitudes of employees toward workplace surveillance.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781937290696
Publisher: Information Today, Inc.
Publication date: 06/01/2006
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 272
File size: 1 MB

About the Author

Jeffrey M. Stanton is an associate professor in the school of information studies at Syracuse University. His work has been published in Human Performance, International Journal of Human-Computer Interaction, Information Technology and People, Journal of Applied Psychology, Journal of Information Systems Education, and Personnel Psychology. He is the recipient of the National Science Foundation's CAREER award. He lives in Jamesville, New York. Kathryn R. Stam is an assistant professor of anthropology at the SUNY Institute of Technology–Utica. She is a founding member and the associate director of the Syracuse Information Security Evaluation (SISE) project. Her research has appeared in Journal of Digital Information, Journal of Information Systems Education, and World Health Forum. She lives in New Hartford, New York.

Read an Excerpt

The Visible Employee

Using Workplace Monitoring and Surveillance to Protect Information Assets â" Without Compromising Employee Privacy or Trust


By Jeffrey M. Stanton, Kathryn R. Stam

Information Today, Inc.

Copyright © 2006 Jeffrey M. Stanton and Kathryn R. Stam
All rights reserved.
ISBN: 978-1-937290-69-6



CHAPTER 1

An Introduction to Information Protection and Employee Behavior


In most organizations, information flows at the heart of workplace activities. The effective management of information requires information technology, and that technology is therefore crucial to organizational success. Information technology comes in many forms — networked personal computers, personal productivity devices, software applications, the Internet, and more — but one thing all types of information technology have in common is that their effective use depends upon human users. People put the technology to work in managing information, and people are ultimately responsible for whether information technology succeeds or fails. Within organizations, these people are the employees who use the technology to get their jobs done, serve the needs of customers, and keep the organization running.

Almost all organizations that use information technology in any substantial way are also struggling to maintain effective information security. In an increasing number of organizations, information is among the most valuable assets they possess. As connectivity among information systems has increased, so has the likelihood of intrusion into the systems, thefts of business information, fraudulent use of information, defacement of organizational Web sites, and other forms of information loss or damage. A worldwide army of hackers, virus writers, and scam artists stands poised to inflict as much damage as possible on the Internet-connected organization. Organizations are always vulnerable to these external security threats to some degree, but industry research by Ernst and Young (2002) suggests that many expensive security breaches in fact result from activity that occurs within organizations: the so-called insider threat posed by employees or contractors who possess trusted access to the company's information and technology. At the low end, losses from security breaches of all types have been estimated at approximately $20 billion per year (counting U.S. organizations only; Security Wire Digest, 2000). Such losses cause organizations to open their wallets: According to a 2002 industry survey by Information Security magazine, very large organizations spend an average of $6 million per year on information security measures; smaller ones spend nearly 20 percent of their overall information technology budgets on security.

Among the various security technologies used in organizations, many provide the means to monitor employee behavior. Organizations deploy these complex and expensive monitoring technologies under the belief that secure management of an organization's information assets depends in part upon the behavior of employees. Employees are the "end-users" of much of the organization's information, and that information is very literally at their disposal. When employees are careful to handle information in a secure way, the organization, its customers, and its shareholders benefit from the protection of this key asset. Alternatively, mismanagement of information or the malfeasance of isolated individuals who "go bad" may have devastating effects on the organization's success.

Organizations possess an increasingly powerful technological toolbox for finding out what people are doing on their computers and on the network. For the many employees who use computers, a detailed electronic trail of communications, software utilization, and network activity now fills the log files of company servers. Almost every organization with business processes that connect it to the Internet uses one type of system or another to assess networked computer usage, track network access, warn about inappropriate behavior on the network, or try to ensure that such behavior cannot occur. Software and hardware vendors provide a huge array of options for collecting, storing, analyzing, and generating reports based on telecommunications records, logs of Web usage, addresses of e-mail recipients, and e-mail message content. A plethora of details about employees' work habits, computer usage, and personal demographics, and a wide range of other potentially sensitive information is collected and stored in organizational information systems. Enterprise computing systems contain centralized work records and other information about job -related activities in huge interlinked databases. Camera surveillance has also become increasingly common, particularly in the public spaces of the organization (e.g., lobbies, parking lots, customer areas of retail stores), but additionally in non-public spaces such as employee break rooms. Smart cards and proximity badges help the organization know where employees are located and what facilities they have used. All of these forms of monitoring and surveillance allow organizations to increase the visibility of employee behavior, analyze typical usage patterns, flag unusual or unauthorized activities, and reduce the lag between the discovery of problems and subsequent action or decision making. Monitoring and surveillance technologies seem to provide a panacea of observation, analysis, prediction, and control for those who wish to reduce the uncertainty, unpredictability, and risks related to the behavior of information systems users.

A series of U.S. industry surveys has shown that employee monitoring and surveillance occur to some degree in the majority of U.S. work organizations (9 to 5, 1990; Orthmann, 1998; Society for Human Resource Management, 1991, 1999, 2001). In their 2004 survey on workplace e-mail and instant messaging, the American Management Association and the ePolicy Institute found that 60 percent of organizations they contacted used software to monitor employees' e-mail correspondence with parties outside the firm (American Management Association & ePolicy Institute, 2004). Although regulatory controls on monitoring and surveillance are sometimes stricter in other locales, such as Canada, Western Europe, Japan, and Australia, the use of electronic monitoring and surveillance of workers and workgroups occurs in those places as well (International Labour Office, 1993; Mayer-Schönberger, 1999). Employee monitoring and surveillance in emergent industrial economies such as India and China also appear to be widespread, but definitive figures from these countries are more difficult to obtain.

On the surface, these varied capabilities for observation and tracking of employee behavior seem to open up a Pandora's box of potential privacy violations, but using the emotionally loaded word "violation" clouds the subtleties involved in the control over information assets in the organization. Managers have always sought strategies for controlling the environments surrounding their organizations and reducing the risks to which their organizations are exposed. Haggerty and Ericson (2000) referred to these concerns as based on management's "desires for control, governance, security, [and] profit ..." (p. 609). Among various methods to impose control on unruly environments, technology has often played a substantial role (e.g., Simon, 1965, p. 73). Technology stabilizes business processes and makes them more routine. More pointedly, information technology streamlines and amplifies the collection and analysis of data and its use in decision making. Good managerial decisions, in turn, provide the foundation on which successful and sustainable businesses are built.

In opposition to this view, however, privacy advocates and other critics discuss how monitoring and surveillance violates societal norms, cultural preferences, and fundamental personal rights of workers. These critics suggest that with the tacit or explicit approval of regulatory bodies, organizations routinely overstep their bounds by capturing too much information about employees, too frequently, and with too little control over how the data are used, protected, or maintained. The evidence that critics cite arises from a variety of U.S. legal cases — the majority of which have typically been won or settled in the organization's favor — as well as union grievances and popular reports of notable individual cases. These lawsuits arise from aggrieved employees who have been fired or who feel they have suffered some other injustice in the workplace as a result of inaccurate or inappropriate information that has been gathered about them or as a result of information being used in unfair ways. A related danger lies in potential damage to management-labor relationships: In 1987, the U.S. Congress Office of Technology Assessment (OTA) released a report documenting the opposition of 21 national labor unions to the use of computer technology to monitor worker performance (U.S. Congress OTA, 1987, p. 86). Employee privacy is one of its major concerns; few would disagree that it is highly difficult to make any longlasting or ironclad guarantees about the privacy of confidential data collected by organizations. All of these issues have been used by critics to argue against the extensive use of surveillance and monitoring technologies.

In the present book, we take neither the side of the technologists nor the side of the privacy advocates. Each of their perspectives may have validity in different contexts, but making this issue either black or white passes over a lot of gray territory by assuming that employees simply accept these technologies as deployed; that information technology professionals administer them exactly according to managerial edicts; that relationships among employees, managers, and technologists are either irrelevant or unchanging; and that organizations either impose monitoring, surveillance, and security technologies in one monolithic, unilateral step or not at all. In reality, we know from research that integrating any type of new technological capability into a firm requires lots of formal and informal negotiations among the different parties involved: managers, employees, information technology professionals, and others (e.g., Davis, 1989). Every group has a different stake in the issues, and we want to ask whether those stakes are ever put down into common ground. It may be that in some organizations a process occurs in which employees, information technology personnel, and managers weigh what valuable information can and should be captured, what the benefits might be for the different parties involved and for the organization as a whole, and what alternative options are available for simultaneously ensuring information security and protecting employees' interests. In other organizations, managers, employees, and information technology people may simply stumble along, reactively implementing technologies in response to one perceived information protection crisis after another, with no clear vision of how the consequences of their decisions about security and privacy will unfold.

With The Visible Employee, we take the view that many people in organizations recognize that information is a highly valuable commodity: Thoughtful managers, information technology professionals, and employees function as "intuitive information economists" and work diligently in their own spheres to collect, control, and organize the information at hand. One important kind of information pertains to what people are doing on the network, minute by minute, hour by hour, day by day. Few would disagree that controlling the flow of information about one's own computer activities or those of other people is useful, but how one achieves that control probably depends a lot upon where one stands in the organization. More powerful people have one way of controlling things, while the less powerful have other ways. Personal assets, such as expertise, social relationships, and social exchange, may determine who can learn what, when, and at what cost. Expertise is an increasingly important asset because the sheer complexity of organizational information systems has catapulted information technology professionals upward with respect to the control and influence that they have over organizational processes. Information technologists are therefore taking on a new role in organizations as behavioral observers, analyzers, and even sometimes enforcers. In many organizations, information security specialists and other information technology personnel occupy the driver's seat of employee monitoring and surveillance technologies. This alteration of the traditional organizational hierarchy complicates the standard tug-of-war between labor and management by creating a new three-way relationship among employee end-users, information technology/security professionals, and managers.

Note that we use this three-way classification of job functions throughout the book with the knowledge that it simplifies (and perhaps even oversimplifies) the politics and roles in many organizations. Yet, as you will see when we present our interview and survey data, this three-way classification seems like a workable simplification by virtue of the consistency in attitudes and beliefs among many members within each group. Even though certain individuals in some organizations may simultaneously live all three roles — for instance, an assistant director of information technology may have deep knowledge of technology and limited executive power but may also feel like just another worker in the context of the larger organization — we believe that the bulk of the members of any sizeable organization think and act most of the time in accordance with one of the three roles. In short, managers manage, technologists control technology, and workers get things done. Members of each group may have a different take on security, privacy, and monitoring based on what they each need to do to survive and thrive in their respective jobs.

Given the likelihood of different perspectives among the three groups, we think it is reasonable to wonder whether they can all see eye to eye on the question of how to maintain security within the organization while respecting the rights and preferences of those whose behavior is monitored in fulfillment of this goal. We believe that it may be possible and feasible for organizations to navigate between the Scylla and Charybdis of information insecurity and employee mistrust. Organizations can have success with both information security and labor relations through careful, simultaneous attention to issues of employee privacy and autonomy, clear communication of organizational policies, and a thoughtful, multiparty approach to information system design. Such efforts will likely require an unprecedented degree of cooperation and integration among managers, human resources staff, information systems professionals, and other functions within organizations. Although such cooperation may be difficult to achieve, we hope that The Visible Employee will make cooperation both more feasible and more likely by illuminating the separate perspectives for the benefit of the whole organization. By documenting and analyzing the relevant information protection problems from perspectives that encompasses managerial, employee, and technological concerns, we expect to describe a middle road that leads toward secure organizational information while also respecting and protecting fundamental employee rights and expected employee privileges. The data we have collected and that we report in this book can inform both future research and humane practice in organizations.

The development of a perspective that simultaneously considers privacy, social dynamics, and technological capability may also provide a useful starting point for further research in monitoring and surveillance. Privacy, in particular, though extensively studied as a legal and philosophical concept (e.g., Garrett, 1974; Gavison, 1980), is a messy area that social scientists are still trying to figure out (e.g., Newell, 1995). From a practical perspective, we believe that evidence of employee resistance to organizational deployment of information technology systems underscores the point that the introduction of monitoring and/or surveillance into an organization is likely to work best after a set of negotiation processes that bring management, employees, and information technologists to the same table. With recognition of and attention to the social dynamics surrounding new information technology by all involved, it is possible to envision effective and beneficial use of organizational monitoring and surveillance to maintain information security.


(Continues...)

Excerpted from The Visible Employee by Jeffrey M. Stanton, Kathryn R. Stam. Copyright © 2006 Jeffrey M. Stanton and Kathryn R. Stam. Excerpted by permission of Information Today, Inc..
All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site.

Table of Contents

Contents

Copyright,
Foreword, by Gurpreet Dhillon,
Acknowledgments,
Preface,
CHAPTER 1 An Introduction to Information Protection and Employee Behavior,
CHAPTER 2 How Employees Affect Information Security,
CHAPTER 3 Information Security Technologies and Operations,
CHAPTER 4 Employee Monitoring, Surveillance, and Privacy,
CHAPTER 5 Managerial Perspectives,
CHAPTER 6 Information Technology Professionals' Perspectives,
CHAPTER 7 Employee Perspectives on Information Security and Privacy,
CHAPTER 8 Overall Analysis and Interpretation,
CHAPTER 9 Recommendations for Managers, Employees, and Information Security Professionals,
References,
Appendix A: Recommended Reading,
Appendix B: Discussion Questions,
Appendix C: Employee Security-Related Behavior List,
Appendix D: Leadership Interview Protocol,
Appendix E: Information Security Professional Interview Protocol,
Appendix F: Employee Interview Protocol,
Appendix G: Straightforward Acceptable Use Policy,
Appendix H: Straightforward Password Policy,
About the Authors,
Index,

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