Categories: Insights


7 Oct 2009

Work and privacy: technology and companies power control

Over six and a half million of employees use internet during working hours for non-working purposes. Every month, each employee sets to navigation around 38 hours which is equal to, more or less, a week of work.
 
Among companies, there are some which do not set limits to surf the internet for their employees during working hours, some which recommend to connect only at lunch time or before the beginning of the turn, some which put up filters to block access to web sites that have nothing to deal with work.
 
However, companies that intend to limit and prevent any abuse have to deal with the guarantees contained in the Statute of Workers and in the Privacy Code.
 
Art. 4 of the Statute, in fact, does not allow the installation of “audiovisual equipment or other equipment” that allow remote control of employees, while the art. 8 and the Privacy Code safeguard the right of the employee not to reveal political opinions, religious affiliations or trade union opinions.
 
Use of the e-mail is even more protected than internet browsing: in principle, in fact, the contents of email messages, even if the exchange of e-mail is via personal business address, have remain secret unless should occur irregular usage of e-mail.
 
In this case, control is possible but should never constitute remote control of the work performance. Furthermore, the contents of the correspondence itself have to be not accessible.
Subscribe to our newsletter

Contact

Need information? Write to us and our team of experts will respond as soon as possible.

Fill in the form

More news and insights

8 Jul 2026

Pay transparency: one month after its entry into force, two approaches are emerging in the market (The Platform, 8 July 2026 – Vittorio De Luca, Claudia Cerbone e Martina De Angeli)

Since 7 June, EU rules aimed at strengthening the principle of equal pay between men and women for the same work or for work of equal value have…

2 Jul 2026

Did you know…? As of 7 June 2026, Legislative Decree No. 96/2026 is fully in force

As of 7 June 2026, Legislative Decree No. 96/2026 is fully in force. It also introduces into the Italian legal system a structured framework on pay transparency, with…

2 Jul 2026

Failure to serve disciplinary charges does not render the dismissal null and void: italian supreme court confirms no reinstatement remedy for employers below the statutory workforce threshold

Principle of Law In its recent judgment No. 17283 of 1 June 2026, the Italian Supreme Court (Corte di Cassazione) examined the legal consequences arising from the employer's…

2 Jul 2026

AI and the employment relationship: initial guidance from the implementing decrees and data protection implications

Following the preliminary approval by the Council of Ministers, on 10 June 2026, of the first draft legislative decrees implementing the enabling law on artificial intelligence (Law No.…

1 Jul 2026

Sustainability, Responsibility, and the Future: A Commitment That Grows with Time

As we celebrate our 50th anniversary, we have chosen to look to the future with the same care and dedication with which we preserve our roots. Those roots…

25 Jun 2026

Pay Equity and Pay Transparency: What Will Change in Italy (People are People, 25 June 2026 – Claudia Cerbone e Martina De Angeli)

With Legislative Decree No. 96 of 7 May 2026, which entered into force on 7 June 2026, Italy transposed Directive (EU) 2023/970 on pay transparency, becoming one of…