Comments on: It's my Internet--I can do what I want
Employees are roaming the Net at work for their own personal use, a potential liability for companies, attorney Eric J. Sinrod says.
Employees are roaming the Net at work for their own personal use, a potential liability for companies, attorney Eric J. Sinrod says.
November 30, 2009 3:24 PM PST
November 30, 2009 3:08 PM PST
November 30, 2009 2:23 PM PST
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When are employees going to learn that business Internet connections do not belong to them? Why do they believe that surfing these sites and comsuming huge amounts of bandwidth with the lame video or audio feeds that often accompany these profiles is OK for them to do?
I believe that every company with the ability should not only block this site but should also immediately fire anyone caught with myspace.com on their monitor during work hours.
This study is more of a marketing gimmick than anything else.
I am very comfortable with companies reasonably restricting use of their corporate Internet resources to support their business purposes. It's not only reasonable, but necessary, for corporate IT departments to carry out hardware- and software-based policies to make sure the primary use of Internet resources is for business purposes. I also think that companies should to give SOME leeway to employees for limited personal Internet use when such use doesn't detract from the company's business purposes. As another person mentioned, some people go out to take a smoke break to unwind while at work and others surf the web to unwind. I work for a Fortune 200 company that emphasizes that the primary use of its Internet resources is business use -- but also acknowledges that limited personal use is OK too.
Just my $.02...
The company that sponsored this study was a "provider of employee Internet management solutions" - get it? a company that sells software to stop employees doing personal activities at work!
And if thats not enough, the numbers don't stand up to even the most obvious analysis...
22.39 percent of all Web pages accessed at work are for personal use
21.28 percent of all work bandwidth costs are attributed to personal use.
So all bandwidth costs are variable and not fixed? If the employees reduced internet use by 20% the companies ISP would reduce it's bill by 20%?
And this line is great...
"employee productivity draining Web sites"
Employers problem with employee productivity won't be cured by buying web surf control software but by inspiring and empowering their employees to care about the work they do.
But hey, signing a check to a software company is so much easier right?
Oh, and can I interest anyone in work blocking software for your home computer?
Paul Pickthorne
pickpaul@gmail.com
I guess that Mr. Sinrod has never done any personal errands on work time. Also, I don't see him calling for CEO's to stop having their adminstrators handle personal errands. But then, that would be biting the hand that feeds, correct Mr. Sinrod?
- Results are presented strongly biased
- by hilhorst March 29, 2006 9:53 PM PST
- I think the results of the survey this article is based upon are presented in a strongly biased manner. The article states that employees spend 20.42 percent of their Internet viewing time. This should be considerably less than 20.42 percent of their time at work, because I don't assume all 10,000 persons in the survey spend 100 percent of their time at work on the Internet.
- Like this Reply to this comment
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(8 Comments)Also, the article doesn't mention whether the same employees compensate for their time spent on the Internet on these personal activities.
Also, taking some time to unwind after having dealt with a problem or something may actually improve my productivity for the remainder of the day. Some people go for a smoke, I like to surf to sites like News.com, which in itself also contributes to my work as an IT specialist.