Limitless Worker Surveillance
Ifeoma Ajunwa, Kate Crawford, and Jason Schultz
California Law Review
From the Pinkerton private detectives of the 1850s, to the
closed-circuit cameras and email monitoring of the 1990s, to new
apps that quantify the productivity of workers, and to the
collection of health data as part of workplace wellness programs,
American employers have increasingly sought to track the activities
of their employees. Starting with Taylorism and Fordism, American
workers have become accustomed to heightened levels of monitoring
that have only been mitigated by the legal counterweight of
organized unions and labor laws. Thus, along with economic and
technological limits, the law has always been presumed as a
constraint on these surveillance activities. Recently, technological
advancements in several fields—big data analytics, communications
capture, mobile device design, DNA testing, and biometrics—have
dramatically expanded capacities for worker surveillance both on and
off the job. While the cost of many forms of surveillance has
dropped significantly, new technologies make the surveillance of
workers even more convenient and accessible, and labor unions have
become much less powerful in advocating for workers. The American
worker must now contend with an all-seeing Argus Panoptes built from
technology that allows for the trawling of employee data from the
Internet and the employer collection of productivity data and health
data, with the ostensible consent of the worker. This raises the
question of whether the law still remains a meaningful avenue to
delineate boundaries for worker surveillance.
www.californialawreview.org/wp-content/uploads/2017/07/3Ajunwa-Schultz-Crawford-36.pdf
https://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=2746211
Copyright © 2017 California Law Review, Inc. California Law Review,
Inc. (CLR) is a California nonprofit corporation. CLR and the
authors are solely responsible for the content of their
publications.