Employee Monitoring Software
Employee monitoring software is a means of employee monitoring and allows company administrators to monitor and supervise all their employee computers from a central location. It is normally deployed over a business network and allows for easy centralized log viewing via one central networked PC.[1] Sometimes, companies opt to monitor their employees using remote desktop software instead.
Purpose[edit]
Employee monitoring software is used to supervise employees' performance, prevent illegal activities, avoid confidential info leakage, and catch insider threats. Nowadays employee monitoring software is widely used in technology companies.[2]
Features[edit]
An employee monitoring program can monitor almost everything on a computer, such as keystrokes and passwords inputted, websites visited, chats in Facebook Messenger, Skype, and other social chats. A piece of monitoring software can also capture screenshots of mobile activities.[3] E-mail monitoring includes employers having access to records of employee’s e-mails that are sent through the company’s servers. Companies may use keyword searches to natural language processing to analyze e-mails. The administrator can view the logs through a cloud panel, or receive the logs by email.[4]
Criticism[edit]
Bossware, also known as tattleware, is software that allows supervisors to automatically monitor the productivity of their employees. Common features of bossware include activity monitoring, screenshotting or screen recording, keystroke logging, webcam and/or microphone activation, and "invisible" monitoring. Bossware has been called a form of spyware.[5] During the COVID-19 pandemic, the use of bossware by companies to monitor their employees increased.
The Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF) denounced bossware as a violation of privacy. The Center for Democracy and Technology (CDT) denounced bossware as a threat to the safety and health of employees. During the COVID-19 pandemic, members of the antiwork subreddit shared various mouse jiggler strategies to combat bossware intended to monitor the productivity of remote workers. A study by Reports and Data predicts that the global market for employee remote monitoring software will hit $1.3 billion by 2027.[6]
References[edit]
- ↑ What Is Employee Monitoring Software?
- ↑ The Eavesdropping Employer: A Twenty‐First Century Framework for Employee Monitoring
- ↑ Workexaminer: Employee Monitoring Software for internet usage tracking and web control
- ↑ Examining employee compliance with organizational surveillance and monitoring - Spitzmüller
- ↑ How Your Boss Can Use Your Remote-Work Tools to Spy on You | Wirecutter
- ↑ Workplace monitoring platform Aware takes in $60M | VentureBeat