Topic: LEGAL REASONING

Topic: LEGAL REASONING

Order Description

Privacy Expectations on work devices

Consider this excerpt from McLaren v. Microsoft: “According to McLaren, his practice was to store his e-mail messages in “personal folders.” Even so, any e-mail

messages stored in McLaren’s personal folders were first transmitted over the network and were at some point accessible by a third-party. Given these circumstances, we

cannot conclude that McLaren, even by creating a personal password, manifested–and Microsoft recognized–a reasonable expectation of privacy in the contents of the

e-mail messages such that Microsoft was precluded from reviewing the messages.”

Many of you use company computers and company cell phones. Do you have any (reasonable) expectation of privacy on these devices? Should you? If so, is McLaren v.

Microsoft wrongly decided?

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