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Legality of recording conversations. Is recording conversations
legal?
The legality of recording phone conversations is considered
here from the employee and employer perspectives in the work
place. The legality of recording telephone conversations is
somewhat different if the issue concerns what the employee
says to the customer, or if the employee makes a private call.
The legality of phone taps is different in each of these situations
and could be considered surveillance if the employee cannot
make a private call from work that is not recorded.
At the request of the Home Office on 19th August 1999 OFTEL
published new guidance to companies covering their responsibilities
over recording phone calls for business purposes. Companies
and organisations that routinely record telephone calls must
ensure that their employees are able to make personal calls
that are not also recorded under the same system. Staff must
also be made aware that personal conversations could be recorded
on their telephone and must have access to a separate telephone
on the premises where they can make and receive personal calls
that are not recorded. Companies that do not provide this
guarantee of confidentiality could be in breach of Article
8 of the Europe Convention on Human Rights which covers people's
right to privacy.
The OFTEL guidance is intended to help companies in the private
sector and follows a recent Home Office circular issued to
all public bodies on this matter. The Home Office circular
was issued in response to the European Court of Human Rights
(ECtHR) decision in June 1997 on the case of Halford vs UK.
The essence of the judgment was that interception of a person's
office telephone can constitute an interference with the right
to respect for their private life established under Article
8 ECHR. Where this is so, the interception must be carried
out in accordance with the law and there must be an effective
remedy. Because UK law relating to interception does not currently
extend to non-public telephone networks, this form of interception
could not be carried out in accordance with the law and consequently
there was no effective remedy.
Recording telephone conversations on private networks:
1. This note contains new advice to companies that provide
telephone services to their employees. This is published at
the request of the Home Office who wish to alert such companies
to a new and important legal interpretation of their obligations
concerning the privacy of their employees' telephone calls.
This advice is necessary to ensure that the UK is compliant
the European Convention on Human Rights (ECHR) and a recent
ruling in the European Court of Human Rights (ECHR). If you
run a company or are in any way responsible within your company
or organisation for the provision of telephone services, you
need to read, understand and act on this new advice. This
includes any organisation that runs its own switchboard, call
centre or other type of private voice network.
The Present Position
2. Several factors have contributed to the growing practice
of recording or monitoring telephone conversations at the
work place in recent years. Within the financial services
sector it has become widely accepted even where it is not
strictly a regulatory requirement. The growth of call centres
has led to a significant expansion in the amount of business
done by telephone. The need to ensure customer satisfaction,
to train and supervise call centre staff, to achieve quality
targets, to have a record of what was said in the event of
a subsequent dispute - all these have inevitably led to widespread
monitoring and recording of calls.
3. Where organisations do feel it necessary to record or
monitor calls - for whatever reasons - the rules under which
they do so have been set by the Privacy of Messages condition
of the major two telecoms class licences - the Self-Provision
(SPL) and Telecommunication Services (TSL) Licences. The most
fundamental requirement of this condition has been that every
reasonable effort is made to inform all parties to a telephone
conversation that it may or will be recorded. Annex 1 provides
an extract of the relevant section of the SPL/TSL.
4. Although the condition does not specify precisely how
the parties should be informed, most people will now be aware
of how many firms are conforming to the requirement. Advertisements
that invite calls to a given number, whether the advert appears
as a poster, on television or radio or in the print media,
frequently carry a message to the effect that calls may be
recorded or monitored for quality.
Why new guidance now?
5. Effective as the SPL/TSL rules have been they were not
designed to address the broader legal issues, pertaining to
privacy, that can arise with recording and monitoring. These
rules effectively regulate how an organisation should give
relevant parties warning about recording or monitoring, but
do not fully elaborate the privacy rights of employees in
the workplace. The new advice, based on the ECHR judgment,
focuses on the reasonable expectation of privacy that employees
are entitled to in the workplace - an entitlement conferred
by the European Convention on Human Rights that is going to
be incorporated into UK law by the Human Rights Act 1998.
6. The purpose of the new Home Office guidance is to clarify
what employers need to do now, in advance of proposed legislative
changes, to comply with the Convention and the lessons learned
from the judgment.
7. Under the new advice, the present SPL/TSL rules remain
valid, but the new Home Office advice is based upon the principle
that "everyone has the right to respect for his private
and family life, his home and his correspondence" established
by the European Convention on Human Rights. It may not therefore
be sufficient simply to warn employees that their phone calls
at work may be recorded or monitored in order to remove their
expectation of privacy. This is because it is not reasonable
to assume that people at work will never make or receive calls
touching on personal and domestic matters. One lesson to be
drawn from the judgment is that there is a legitimate expectation
of privacy for such calls.
8. This means that there has to be some way in which employees
at work can make or receive personal calls that will not be
recorded or monitored. The circular suggests that one way
of doing this would be for an employer to provide adequate
access to payphones in the workplace with an undertaking that
they will not be subject to any form of recording or monitoring.
However this is not the only way of meeting this objective.
The key issue is that there are some lines at work which members
of staff can use for private calls secure in the confidence
that calls made from them will not be recorded or monitored.
9. It is equally important that employees continue to be
informed that recording or monitoring may take place on official
work phones, as already required by the SPL/TSL. The main
reason for this is that once there has been a clear explanation
that calls made on a particular system may be recorded or
monitored, anyone making calls on that system is acknowledging
the possibility that those calls may be recorded or monitored.
This can be interpreted as implied consent and removes the
expectation of privacy. As OFTEL has previously advised, the
necessary information can be given within a work environment
in a number of ways including terms and conditions of employment,
staff notices, posters and global e-mails.
10. External callers also need to be advised of the possibility
of recording or monitoring. Companies have devised a number
of appropriate ways to meet this requirement, including the
use warnings in advertising and customer literature.
What else should be done?
11. Although it may not be a strict legal necessity, it is
certainly good practice to explain to staff why their calls
might be recorded or monitored. Moreover this will offer a
higher degree of protection in the case of a legal challenge.
Employers should develop guidelines covering their policy
on recording and monitoring in the workplace and the use they
will make of the material derived from it.
12. It is however advisable to restrict recording and monitoring
activities to situations where they are both absolutely necessary
and proportionate to the problem to be overcome. For example,
misuse of office phones could be detected by an itemised call
record, which is less intrusive than recording or monitoring
of the actual calls.
Conclusion
13. In conclusion, the main lessons to be drawn are that
employees in the workplace are entitled to privacy for any
personal calls they may make; that their expectation of privacy
for work-related calls must be removed by adequate warning
and that where their privacy is affected it must be for some
purpose which is both reasonable and proportionate.
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