"David W. Chapman Jr." wrote:
>
> Aren't we forgetting that what people do at work is property of the
> business, from email to whatever they do at their desktop during business
> hours. Granted nobody likes to be spied on, its a decision that should be
> made by management/hr departments whether the employees know about it or
> not.
I would not work for a company that deemed that sort of thing
acceptable,
and I would quit if I found my work was being surreptitiously spied
upon.
I suspect most people feel the same (though some might not have the
luxury of being able to quit in protest). I can certainly see why the
AT&T
developers would not want to be seen as supporting this kind of
activity.
(Hmm, it seems software -is- political. Damn.)
-- Joe
> > You are right about one thing. People are curious about the icon. So save
> > yourselves a lot of trouble and just explain to them what it is. In all of
> > the different organizations I have worked in, I have yet to meet anyone
> > who likes to be spied upon. Sure you can take away the icon, but I
> wouldn't
> > want to be ya the day that someone discovers you are spying on them.
> ---------------------------------------------------------------------
> To unsubscribe, send a message with the line: unsubscribe vnc-list
> to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> See also: http://www.uk.research.att.com/vnc/intouch.html
> ---------------------------------------------------------------------
-- Joe Knapka
---------------------------------------------------------------------
To unsubscribe, send a message with the line: unsubscribe vnc-list
to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
See also: http://www.uk.research.att.com/vnc/intouch.html
---------------------------------------------------------------------