| |
Your staff are likely to use email or browse the Internet. Their actions have a direct legal impact on
you, their employer. This part of the guide covers:
- Use of email and the risks of defamation
- Bullying or harassment of employees by email
- Passing on computer viruses by your employees
- Accessing pornographic material on the Internet
- Data protection in the workplace
|
|
|
a Defamation
Most email users will have received messages at one time or
another which might be considered unwise, or legally
dangerous. Part of the problem lies in the immediacy of email.
Comments which would never be published if they had to be
typed, printed and posted in a letter are often sent to multiple
recipients by email before the sender has considered the longterm
implications of his or her comments. Worse again, these
comments can then be forwarded to many more people,
worsening any injury which might be caused.
The law is clear - the provisions of defamation law apply equally
to electronic communications as they do to non-electronic. In
addition, if an email containing defamatory material is sent by
an employee during the course of his or her employment, the
employer may be held liable in any court action for damages,
even if the email was not authorised by the employer.
All businesses are best advised to draw up an email policy to be
signed by all employees. Such a policy should stress that since
all emails sent from the business account are effectively company
emails, the company will treat very seriously any email which
contains defamatory or unsavoury content. Small business
representative organisations offer sample email and Internet
usage policies for their members' use.
Your company could install automatic scanning software to sift
out incoming or outgoing mail containing unsavoury content.
Again, you should inform employees that such software has
been installed, and the reasons for its use.
You might also include a disclaimer to the end of all emails
transmitted out of your workplace, stating that it is company
policy that employees shall not send libellous, inappropriate or
defamatory statements. Such disclaimers are not legally binding,
but they may begin to reduce the company's liability.
b Bullying and Harassment
If a member of your staff sends an email to another employee
containing material which offends the latter, and is based on
discriminatory grounds, then this can be considered harassment.
The Equal Status Act 2000 defines harassment as taking place"where a person subjects another person ('the victim') to any
unwelcome act, request or conduct, including spoken words,
gestures or the production, display or circulation of written
words, pictures or other material, which in respect of the victim
is based on any discriminatory ground and which could
reasonably be regarded as offensive, humiliating or intimidating
to him or her.
The nine discriminatory grounds listed in the Act are:
- Gender
- Marital status
- Family status
- Sexual orientation
- Religion
- Disability
- Race and membership of the travelling community
An employer is legally responsible for harassment and bullying
in the workplace unless he or she takes reasonably practicable
steps to prevent such harassment or bullying. Employers who
take such steps may avoid liability from such acts in any legal
proceedings brought against them.
At the outset, therefore, all employers should establish an
accessible and effective policy and procedure to deal with
harassment and bullying. These measures should be agreed by
the employers with relevant trade union or employee
representatives.
When an allegation of harassment or bullying is brought to an
employer's attention, he or she should investigate the matter fully
and without delay. In the context of allegations concerning email,
these will be easier to deal with, given that there is likely to be a
permanent record of the alleged harassment.
c eSecurity
There have been cases in the past where viruses were knowingly
and maliciously passed on from an employee in one company to an employee in another. Whether or not this is done with
the support or consent of the sender's employer, the risk
remains that the employer may be liable for the damage
caused by the virus.
You should put in place appropriate policies to ensure that all
employees are warned and trained to guard against the
introduction of a virus onto your network, or the transmission
of a virus onto an outside network. For instance, it is
inadvisable to open attachments to emails unless your are
satisfied with the authenticity of the communication, even if it
appears to originate from a known third party.
Having up to date anti-virus software and an appropriate firewall
is highly recommended in the best interests of your company and
your customers. Depending on the nature of your business, you
may have a higher level of responsibility - a legal "duty of care"
- to do so you may be dealing with confidential customer
information, for instance. Some viruses can, if opened,
automatically access address books or email logs and replicate
and send emails to each addressee. At the very least, routinely
scanning communications is in the best interests of the business
and your customers.
Related Links
Learn more about Ireland's equality law
Read Enterprise Ireland's guide to eSecurity
Learn
more about the Data Protection Commissioiners advice
for employers
|