Lantis wrote:
If some of you aren't aware, I'm a network admin as part of a extremely small IT department (it's just me and another guy (my boss, who's the IT Manager). And HR has asked us to start monitoring other people's computers... which includes all the web sites they visit, how long they were at said site, all the applications they've been in as well as how long they were in them. Everything can easily be screenshot. I don't know how I really feel about this. As far as I see it, as long as they aren't breaking the computer, it's none of my clucking business what they do on it.
Actually, what's really interesting is that the latest issue of Computerworld had an article on this. And a guy pretty much summed up how I felt by saying, "We're IT gues, We're not baby sitter." I looked to see if I couldn't find the article online, but I didn't find it. But it seems some people actually think it's their sworn duty to keep track of this stuff... and it confuses me.
But that's only half my issue. Here's were things get a little (more) dirty. Let's say there's a lady in HR. Her name will be Mrs. Molly. Molly has asked for the past moth of computer use from all the users in the admin building. After doing as she asked, a few days later, a good number of employees were sent home for 3 days without pay and a warning of termination for another infraction.
This work place isn't very big, so everyone kind of knows each other fairly well. And because of having to keep up with this stupid tracking program, I generally know now the kind of places these people go. And the people who were sent home vs the list of people going to non-work related sites just didn't match up. Let's say that there's a lady in the admin building by the name of Ms. Ann. She doesn't really get on the internet at all. And the only time she does is to get data for some excel spreadsheets for the plant or whatever. Maybe looking at local news for the town or whatnot. Things that might not really be directly work related or something. But then we have Mr. Jake... who browses Facebook, Youtube, and generally the works when it comes to non-work related stuff. My problem comes when Ann was sent home and not Jake. And this is after knowing that Ann and Molly have had... words in the past.
So what do you do? To me, it feels like Molly is taking advantage of the system. And I am not okay with that. I just want to rip this software off our network entirely. It just doesn't feel right. And it's not like HR really answers to anyone. Specially not to IT. I'm not sure what I should do... =/
seemingly you are, to a limited extent, justifying your dislike of the software by the uses/abuses to which it is put. which in a way is nice because if this were an examination of the ethics of surveillance, I wouldn't be typing right now. ^_^
This is a more practical problem
woot. In my response I am making several assumptions, one being that the suspensions without pay were doled out purely on the basis of the information you submitted. If Mz Molly has a whole portfolio of additional information then one or two of the options become less practical.
Just at first glance you have several options, ranging in scope from tepid to small-town-despot. In order:
- you can take this to your boss and let him make a decision. lets call this weaksauce mode. he may have a good idea, but he'll probably just go 'meh, managing the managers isn't my job' and at least you might be able to this whole issue to the back of your mind.
- you could give Mz Molly information broadly reduced in detail, scope, etc. if the situation is that the information given is being used as grounds for managerial fuckery, it resolve your situation if you were able to find a way to give insufficient information for such fuckery. i can see this potentially being difficult, depends how tight a ship you run. if you are generally busy then it may work halfway well.
- take a full breakdown of the information and present it to a halfway honest superior, or hell, give it to the aggrieved parties themselves to take to Mz Molly's superiors if they so wish. Judging by what you've said, I doubt it'd take too long to get some basic comparisons which would demonstrate that Ms Ann, say, was in the bottom 50% of employees when it comes to wasted time or whatever. Hell, throw Mz Molly in there if she wastes a lot of time/you have the balls for it. In short, take more representative statistics and use them to make the point which you wish to see made. Nothing revolutionary, just a simple 'her actions were unjustified based on this evidence' point.
finally, maybe my favourite;
- take a breakdown of the information to someone else, without making any comment whatsoever on Mz Molly's actions and use the data itself to make a case for
your being put in charge of this project. I know you hate babysitting, but there are several advantages to this tactic that you might not have considered fully. Firstly, it makes it very easy to manipulate the information and render it harmless. Give out statistics or something in lieu of the no doubt detailed information you're currently providing. Routinely (and very summarily) 'inspect' the information yourself, perhaps. Scroll through it for anything totally out of order and then delete it/store it elsewhere, or just say that you did if you're asked to help crucify any more of your colleagues. There are options, though truthfully I can't justifiably be much more speculative than I already have.
I think that if this information is both a. capable of getting people fired, and b. being abused, you should take some sort of action. I'd be surprised if you were the only concerned person in the company. Hell, I think that even if you weren't keen on taking action, the people who got threatened should be. Possibly you could tell them to request that you let them see any pertinent information relating to their own browsing and take it to an alternative authority figure to check against the average time wasted, etc.
If any of this seems halfway viable, go ahead and email me or whatever. I'd be up for talking this over on msn if it's of any use to you.