1 / 39

My Space ® or Your Space? Social Networking

My Space ® or Your Space? Social Networking. SOUTH DAKOTA RETAILERS ASSOCIATION. Presented by: Christopher E. Hoyme Jackson Lewis, LLP 10050 Regency Circle, Suite 400 Omaha, NE 68114 (402) 391-1991 HoymeC@jacksonlewis.com www.jacksonlewis.com. EMPLOYEE SOCIAL NETWORKING SITES.

rosina
Download Presentation

My Space ® or Your Space? Social Networking

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. My Space® or Your Space?Social Networking SOUTH DAKOTA RETAILERS ASSOCIATION Presented by: Christopher E. Hoyme Jackson Lewis, LLP 10050 Regency Circle, Suite 400 Omaha, NE 68114 (402) 391-1991 HoymeC@jacksonlewis.com www.jacksonlewis.com

  2. EMPLOYEE SOCIAL NETWORKING SITES

  3. Types Of Social Networking • Email • Instant Messaging • Social Media Sites • FaceBook® • MySpace ® • LinkedIn ® • Blogs • Twitter ® • On-Line Media • YouTube ®

  4. The Internet: Resources And Risks • The information age has brought new resources and new challenges to the workplace. Increasingly, employers are turning to the internet to obtain more information about job applicants. There is a tension, however, between the need to obtain information and the risks associated with acting on information obtained online.

  5. Frequency Of Use During Working Hours • 6% of employees visit social networking sites only for business reasons • 5% …access social networking sites only for personal reasons • 10% …access social networking sites for both business and personal reasons • 52% …choose not to use social networking sites during work hours • 26% …stated the company’s network prevents them from accessing these sites SOURCE: http://www.deloitte.com/dtt/cda/doc/content/us_2009_ethics_workplace_survey_220509.pdf

  6. Other Employment-Related Statistics • 74% of employees surveyed say it’s easy to damage a company’s reputation on social media. • 53% of employee respondents said their social networking pages are none of their employers’ business. • 40% of business executive respondents disagree, and 30% admit to informally monitoring social networking sites. • 15% of employees say that if their employer did something that they didn’t agree with, they would comment about it on line. SOURCE: http://www.deloitte.com/dtt/cda/doc/content/us_2009_ethics_workplace_survey_220509.pdf

  7. Employment-Related Uses by Employees • Find jobs. • Communicate with other employees. • Communicate with clients, vendors or customers. • Research prospective employers. • Personal communication. • Spreading the word about a product or service. • Dissing the job, the boss or coworkers.

  8. Sample MySpace® Page

  9. Sample MySpace® Profile

  10. Employment-Related Uses by Employers • Maintaining company sponsored sites • Branding or marketing tool • Introduce products • Build loyalty among employees • Screen candidates • Actively seek and recruit employees • Communicate with employees • Monitor the company’s reputation • Increase customers and customer loyalty

  11. Potential Liabilities • General Areas • Exhibitionism: lack of filtering when posting information • Voyeurism: searching for information • Electronic Footprints • Shows where you have been and what you have been doing on line • Can be used for e-discovery

  12. Risks for Employees • Disclosure of employer’s trade secrets or other confidential information • Liability for defamation and libel • Spreading untrue and disparaging information • Invasion of Privacy Claims • Harassment/Bullying • Disqualification from jobs • Posted information may reveal poor communication skills, drinking, sexual content, lies about qualifications, attitude toward previous employer, etc. • Copyright infringement/plagiarism

  13. Risks for Employers • Harassment or Bullying by Employees • Textual harassment or sexting • Discrimination • Employer sponsorship of blog • Ratification of content by inaction • Obligation to take action to prevent or eliminate inappropriate content once on notice • Employer viewing applicant information • Sites may contain information regarding protected status • Information can be garnered that cannot be asked in an interview • May become evidence of what you knew when making employment decision. • Difficult for employer to prove it did not view and rely upon the information when making decision

  14. Risks for Employers • Using the Web to Make Hiring Decisions • Many employers and job recruiters check out potential employees on the Web. • Using search engines such as Google or Yahoo and internet sites such as PeopleFinders.com, Local.Live.com or Zillow.com • Some studies show more than half of employers use some kind of screening on social networking sites.

  15. Using Social Media for Recruitment • Attract Employees – through FaceBook® presence or advertising, LinkedIn® discussion board or YouTube® • Source – Twitter®, LinkedIn® • Engage – gather information from target employees for profiles • Screen – look at profiles • Close the deal – welcome through conversations on social network

  16. Risks for Employers • Hiring Issues Associated with Using the Web • Lawful background checks? • Lawful-off duty conduct? • Even if not unlawful, employer may be making employment decisions based on inaccurate information.

  17. Risks for Employers • Hiring Issues Associated with Using the Web • Access to information regarding protected status? • Learn about applicant’s workers’ compensation claim? • Learn about applicant’s bankruptcy?

  18. Good Practice for Internet Recruiting • Do searches consistently. • Document them. • Determine how the information found is relevant to the job. • If make employment decision, based on information found, maintain records according to state and federal law.

  19. Risks for Employers • Privacy Concerns • Does monitoring of or surveillance of employee blogs or social sites violate employee’s right to privacy? • Generally, no right to privacy. • Unless access is restricted by poster. • Wage and Hour Violations • Does time spent maintaining or contributing to company-sponsored blog or checking email constitute work under the FLSA?

  20. Risks for Employers • Negligent Referral • FaceBook®, LinkedIn®, and Twitter® allow users to post recommendations from their employers. • Employee expects detailed favorable recommendation • Favorable on-line reference may conflict with employee performance evaluations • Negative online recommendation may be the basis for defamation claim.

  21. Risks for Employers • Violations of NLRA protected rights • Posting may constitute “concerted action” • NLRA protects discussion of wages, hours and working conditions. • Unfair Competition/False Advertising • Federal Trade Commission Guides • Employer may be liable for violation if employee does not disclose relationship to employer when employee posts regarding products and services

  22. Risks for Employers • Wrongful Termination • Potential Sarbanes Oxley violation where employee reports unlawful conduct online and is terminated • Not sure yet whether publication in a blog satisfies reporting requirement • Potential NLRA violation where employee complains in blog about company practices regarding pay, working conditions • Potential anti-retaliation violation where employee terminated for complaining in blog that manager treats blacks differently than whites

  23. Risks for Employers • Disclosure of Trade Secrets or Proprietary Information • Risk of disclosing • Customer databases • Financial reports • Privileged passwords

  24. Risks for Employers • Defamation or libel • If information is posted on company blog or company owned equipment, employer may be named as a defendant. • Copyright infringement violations • Unauthorized use of company logos

  25. Risks for Employers • Violations of Security Laws • Disclosure of non-public material information • Illegal Use of Genetic Information • Genetic Information Nondisclosure Act (GINA) • Cannot discriminate based on genetic information • Cannot make employment decisions based on genetic information • Strict confidentiality requirements

  26. Best Practices For Employees • Make employees aware that they are subject to same privacy laws as employers. • Place employees on notice regarding appropriate use of internet. • Ensure employees understand that posting equals world-wide publication. • Make employees aware of the privacy rights of others.

  27. Best Practices for Employers • Be proactive. • Adopt a clear policy. • Train employees on the proper use of the Internet • Consider a total ban on the Internet during working hours. • Place employees on notice regarding potential monitoring. • Be consistent in disciplining for violations. • Understand the risk inherent in using the Internet and develop policies to manage potential pitfalls.

  28. Key Provisions of a Social Media Policy • Expectation of Privacy • Eliminate employee expectation of privacy when using company owned technology. • Provide notice that monitoring will occur. • Consider informing employees and potential employees that you intend to monitor the Internet. • Obtain releases for such searches.

  29. Key Provisions of a Social Media Policy • Posting During Working Time • Prohibit or limit use of social networking or blogging at work • None or limited during working hours • BUT, protected activity under NLRA

  30. Key Provisions of a Social Media Policy • Required Disclaimers • Use true identity • If mention company and expressing opinion regarding Company, disclose posting is opinion of employee • If speaking about employer products or services, disclose employment relationship

  31. Key Provisions of a Social Media Policy • Employee Responsibility • Employee is responsible for online activity conducted personally or which can be traced to Company. • Anti-Discrimination and Harassment • Information posted to blogs should not harass or attack an employee, contractor, customer or vendor based upon protected status.

  32. Key Provisions of a Social Media Policy • All Company Polices apply to online use: • Handbook, Policies • Confidentiality of sensitive Company data • Privacy of personal information • Discrimination and Harassment

  33. Key Provisions of a Social Media Policy • Disclosure of Confidential Information • Clearly prohibit disclosure of confidential information or trade secrets • Required Authorization • Prohibit against solicitation of customers, vendors, clients as friends, unless divulged and approval in advance.

  34. Key Provisions of a Social Media Policy • Consequences • Clearly state that violations of policy can lead to disciplinary action, up to and including termination. • Reporting Procedure • Provide procedure for reporting violations of policy • Designate someone in Company who can be contacted regarding questions

  35. Major Court Decisions: Right to Privacy • O’Connor v. Ortega, 480 U.S. 709 (1987) • Established public employee’s right to a reasonable expectation of privacy in the workplace • But case does not contemplate modern quandary related to social media • Quon v. Arch Wireless • Scheduled to be heard before Supreme Court Spring 2010 • Electronic Workplace Privacy Case • Issue : Whether a California police department violated the privacy of an officer when it read the personal text messages of his department-issued pager.

  36. Recent Stories

  37. Recent Stories

  38. Recent Stories

  39. Presented by: Christopher E. Hoyme HoymeC@jacksonlewis.com 10050 Regency Circle, Suite 400 Omaha, Nebraska 68114 (402) 391-1991 (402) 827-4232 Direct www.jacksonlewis.com

More Related