In the Internet age, the right to privacy
has taken many twists and turns. Some states have enacted statutes
criminalizing computer invasion of privacy.
In a worldwide market, how can the
protections against the appropriation of name and likeness, online
defamation, intrusion into seclusion, false light in the public eye,
and public disclosure of private facts be preserved? In fact, can
you comfortably say that as you read this page there is no spyware
program which is lodged deep within your system tracking your every
move? Internet privacy is a complex legal area and requires the
expertise that our Internet privacy attorneys can provide.
As an example, take email privacy at
your place of employment:
Some courts have held that Your employer
can lie to you about reading your emails… and then fire you for relying
on these lies! Most employees probably know that the emails sent from
their work email accounts are probably being monitored.
However, what if your employer
repeatedly assures you that all e-mail communications would remain
confidential and privileged? What if your employer tells you that
e-mail communications could not be intercepted and used against you as
grounds for termination or reprimand? Can your employer still intercept
your emails, read them, and then fire you for the contents…? The answer
may surprise you... and make you realize that the assistance of an
Internet Law attorney is paramount.
In Smyth v. Pillsbury Co., 914 F.
Supp. 97 (1996), Pillsbury maintained a company e-mail system which the
employees used to communicate among themselves. Mr. Smyth was an
employee of Pillsbury. Pillsbury assured Mr. Smyth as well as the other
employees that all e-mail communications would remain confidential and
privileged and that the e-mail communications could not be intercepted
and used against the employees as grounds for termination or reprimand.
The U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania
surprisingly held that despite the assurances made by Pillsbury, its
employees did not have a “reasonable expectation of privacy in e-mail
communications voluntarily made by an employee to his supervisor over
the company e-mail system.” The Court went on to hold that no
“reasonable person would consider the . . . interception of these
communications to be a substantial and highly offensive invasion of his
privacy.”
The Pillsbury case, although decided
under Pennsylvania law and dating back to 1996, has been cited with
approval by courts in other states, including Massachusetts, Rhode
Island, New York, Oregon, and Texas.
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