Think using Yahoo or Hotmail e-mail at work protects you from your boss' prying eyes? Think again. New spy software essentially lets employers or parents co-pilot virtually any kind of e-mail account, including private Web-based e-mail accounts like Yahoo and Hotmail. . . . . Think using Yahoo or Hotmail e-mail at work protects you from your boss' prying eyes? Think again. New spy software essentially lets employers or parents co-pilot virtually any kind of e-mail account, including private Web-based e-mail accounts like Yahoo and Hotmail. A new version of eBlaster spyware will secretly forward all e-mail coming and going through such Web-based accounts to a spy's e-mail, allowing anyone to "ride-along" even the supposedly private e-mail. SPYWARE FIRM SpectorSoft Corp. which makes eBlaster, is hardly a stranger to controversy. But the new e-mail monitoring technology, which company president Doug Fowler described as "almost a wiretap," is sure to stir even more. It's common for office workers to keep personal matters out of corporate e-mail; many set up free Web-based e-mail accounts at Hotmail or Yahoo to help separate work and private affairs. But eBlaster 3.0, released Wednesday by SpectorSoft, makes it easy for employers or other interested voyeurs to read all e-mail going in and out of almost any kind of e-mail account. The link for this article located at MSNBC is no longer available. . Discover how eBlaster surveillance software empowers employers to track private email communications, raising concerns about workplace privacy.. Email Privacy, Spyware Risks, Workplace Surveillance, Private Email Monitoring, Data Protection. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
The phenomenal rise, and technological sophistication, of workplace surveillance leads the list of the Top 10 privacy stories of the year 2000, according to a Privacy Foundation analysis. Also in the Top 10 are proposed new medical privacy rules; the FBI's . . . . The phenomenal rise, and technological sophistication, of workplace surveillance leads the list of the Top 10 privacy stories of the year 2000, according to a Privacy Foundation analysis. Also in the Top 10 are proposed new medical privacy rules; the FBI's controversial use of the Carnivore email wiretap; DoubleClick's stalled plan to track consumers online; and the arrival of chief privacy officers in corporate boardrooms. "The rise of the Internet has sent a flood tide of privacy concerns through business and society, and the waves are breaking big-time in the workplace," said Stephen Keating, executive director of the Privacy Foundation. "Two-thirds of major American firms now do some type of in-house electronic surveillance, while an estimated 27 percent of firms monitor email." Some of the fallout from that surveillance can be measured in lost jobs, as entities ranging from Dow Chemical to the Central Intelligence Agency have fired or disciplined employees for alleged misuse of workplace communication networks. The link for this article located at Cipherwar is no longer available. . The phenomenal rise, and technological sophistication, of workplace surveillance leads the list of t. phenomenal, technological, sophistication, workplace, surveillance, leads. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
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