CIO

Call for national workplace surveillance legislation

Victorian government is keen to follow NSW's move this month on workplace surveillance legislation but has gone one step further by calling for uniform laws to be enacted across the entire nation.

Responding to recommendations by the Victorian Law Reform Commission (LRC) to adopt workplace surveillance legislation, the state's Attorney General Rob Hulls said the laws should be extended across Australia.

Hulls said he will take the commission's proposals to a meeting with other state and territory attorneys general to push for uniform workplace privacy legislation across the nation.

"It is my view that current laws are inadequate, that the current regime is inadequate, because there are a whole range of circumstances where workplace privacy is being invaded inappropriately," he said.

NSW is the first state to introduce such laws with the Workplace Surveillance Bill 2005 coming into force this week.

NSW Attorney General Bob Debus said it effectively outlaws unauthorized surveillance of employees using technologies such as video cameras, e-mail and tracking devices.

Victoria's LRC hasn't just called for similar legislation to be adopted in that state but is seeking to establish an independent monitoring authority to probe alleged breaches.

Chairperson Marcia Neave said privacy is a fundamental right recognized by international law.

"But our domestic law at the moment doesn't have very much to say about the balance which should be struck between employers' legitimate needs and workers' rights to privacy," she said.

"Technology has surged ahead with new ways to monitor, test and, track workers, but our laws have lagged behind."

The commission's report tackles a range of workplace privacy issues including e-mail monitoring, video surveillance, drug and alcohol testing and genetic testing.

Under the proposed law employers would need authority from a regulator for such testing or to track workers.

Victorian Trades Hall secretary Brian Boyd called for the state government to act swiftly in legislating the proposals.

Victorian Employers Chamber of Commerce and Industry government relations manager David Gregory rejected mandatory regulations. Gregory said employers would accept "guidance material" but that's where it ends.

Business lobby group Australian Business Limited has recommended all businesses undergo an audit of current surveillance activities and devise an Internet and computer usage policy.

Join CIO, the CIO Executive Council & IDC on 6 October at Australia’s premier Melbourne event for senior IT executives – the CIO Summit 2010. Find out more or register now.

More about: ACT, First State

Comments

Post new comment

The content of this field is kept private and will not be shown publicly.
Users posting comments agree to the CIO comments policy.
Login or register to link comments to your user profile, or you may also post a comment without being logged in.
 
Featured Whitepapers
Allocating data center energy costs and carbon to IT users

It is both easy and inexpensive for any data centre, large or small, new or old, to get started allocating costs and carbon, but the expense and complexity escalate and ROI declines when excessive precision is specified. Read on for more.

Wondering how to improve your business with UC on an IP Network?

Join Computerworld's Live Webinar where we will address the move many companies are making towards IP based voice services (SIP trunking, VoIP) and look at how they are using a single connection for data and voice rather than separate lines. Learn about the latest in IP networks and how it can help your organisation.

Wednesday 25th November 2009, Time 10.30 am EST (Sydney, Australia) Screening at your desk

Register now

  • +

    WikiLeaks founder Assange questioned by Swedish police 01 September, 2010 05:36:00

    Police and prosecutor are keeping mum on how the investigation is progressing
    WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange has now been questioned by Swedish police regarding a molestation charge directed at him, his lawyer said Tuesday.
  • +

    uTorrent patches application against DLL vulnerability 30 August, 2010 04:31:00

    uTorrent is one of many applications that is affected by the vulnerability
    The developers of the uTorrent file-sharing application have released an updated version that fixes a problem that could allow an attacker to load malicious code onto a user's computer.
  • +

    Wikileaks' Assange to be questioned, says Swedish prosecutor 26 August, 2010 04:54:00

    The Wikileaks founder has been accused of molestation, though one charge has already been dropped
    Swedish Chief Prosecutor Eva Finné has ordered that WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange be questioned about molestation allegations.
  • +

    Adobe fixes 20 vulnerabilities in Shockwave Player 26 August, 2010 03:55:00

    Most of the vulnerabilities could allow an attacker to run rogue code on a computer
    Adobe Systems patched 20 security vulnerabilities in its Shockwave Player on Tuesday. Most of the flaws could allow an attacker to run their own code on an affected computer.
  • +

    Sticks and stones: Picking on users AND security pros 26 August, 2010 02:08:00

    Name-calling is harmful to the cause of security
    I took my share of name-calling as a kid. I did my share of name-calling, too. We're taught that nothing good comes of such behavior. I've been thinking a lot about that since writing an article two weeks ago called "Security blunders 'dumber than dog snot'" during the 2010 USENIX Security Symposium.

Recent comments
Zones
SAS Resource Centre

This Resource Centre hosts a wealth of thought leadership articles, whitepapers, and success videos, to help you make the most out of your corporate information in order to swiftly make sound business decisions to survive and thrive in the current economic climate.

Oracle Resource Centre

News, Features and the latest whitepapers on SOA, Application Grid, Enterprise Management and Database

CIO Industry Insight Podcast #9: Tim Ayling, Chief Executive Officer, Platform46
Listen to the latest edition of CIO Live which is now available for download.
Listen to the podcast
Sign up to the CIO Live email
Whitepaper
Securing People and Information: How to Protect Against Today’s Web-based Threats

This white paper explores the benefits of an Application Delivery Network, highlighting the ability to protect your users and applications and still deliver outstanding application performance with confidence, consistency and cost-effectiveness across your distributed network.

Read Whitepaper

Brought to you by