Right of the bat, I noticed
s.3(1) does give the power of a corporatation to monitor their own network
services.
Actually read the document
The Telecommunications (Lawful Business Practice) (Interception of
Communications) Regulations 2000
at
http://www.dti.gov.uk/cii/annexa.htm
And they would only need the excuse under
s.3(1) subsection (b), that it's being monitored to insure that their employees
are working and not using the corporate network for say playing Doom, or
running Napster, or talking to their mistresses over IRC to arrange sex dates.
Jason
On 4 Oct 2000, at 13:46, Nigel Metheringham wrote:
>
> paul@??? said:
> > As of yesterday, that activity is now illegal, under the new "Bill of
> > Rights" that came into play. If you monitor employees e-mail or phone
> > conversations, by law you are now infringing basic human rights, and
> > you're looking at doing some bird mate.
>
> Easy come, easy go...
>
> http://www.dti.gov.uk/cii/annexa.htm
> http://www.dti.gov.uk/cii/lbpresponse.htm
>
> Short version. Any company can monitor whatever they like on their
> mail/phone systems as long as they can make a half decent excuse.
>
> Nigel.
> --
> [ - Opinions expressed are personal and may not be shared by VData - ]
> [ Nigel Metheringham Nigel.Metheringham@??? ]
> [ Phone: +44 1423 850000 Fax +44 1423 858866 ]
>
>
>
---
Jason Robertson
Network Analyst
jason@???
http://www.astroadvice.com