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by mrjatx 4225 days ago
Your last point is completely untrue. I've programmed Asterisk systems for large call centers that specifically had supervisor modes where the supervisor could monitor calls to make sure employees were keeping customer service up to par. If this had been illegal the state Workforce Commission would have had a field day each time an unfair termination case came up.

I'm going to assume that's purely state based, but it definitely is legal in some jurisdictions. I'd imagine moreso than not.

I agree that I don't want to work somewhere where you're monitored. I think we'll all agree to that.

But I've actually saved someones skin before by providing logs when a sexual harassment lawsuit came up and an employee was fired unjustly (manager fired them, but his advances were blatant in the logs).

It protects the employee if you use the communications properly.

1 comments

Wiretap laws vary state-by-state, but most require at least one party to consent to a wiretap. Some require both parties to consent, which means turning on call recording is a felony in some states, unless both parties are aware. (Which is probably why every call center starts with "This call may be recorded...").
You consented in your employment contract.