• Skip to content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

The Modern Workplace

  • Home
  • About
  • Contributors
  • Services
  • Contact
Blogs

Privacy & Information Security, Social Media & Technology, Week in Review, Workplace Policies

Week in Review

September 6, 2012 | 2 minute read
PrintPDF

With a tough economy, efficiency and productivity are often paramount for keeping a business afloat. While technology has certainly aided that cause, it has also provided workers with many time-consuming distractions. The productivity-stealing culprits this week: fantasy football, flirty emails, and co-worker impersonation. Check out the links below to learn more about the cost and benefits of allowing fantasy football teams in the workplace and the potentially unexpected effects of using emoticons in office emails (hint: you may find yourself a new admirer).

Another interesting developments in the world of technology: hacker group Anonymous claims to have obtained and published millions of Apple users’ IDs and personal information, but both the FBI and Apple deny that such an a attack occurred or even that such an FBI database of that information ever existed. In other Apple news, questions arose this week as to who “owns” your iTunes library and whether you can bequeath it to your heirs. Read your iTunes Terms and Conditions. You might be surprised at what you find.

Technology and the Workplace

32 Million in U.S.Play Fantasy Football, Much of it Costing Employers Millions (Sports Talk Employment Law) (9 News) (USA Today)
Survey Finds That Office Romances Often Sparked by Emoticon-Laced Emails (Huffington Post)
Kingsport Officer Arrested for Fake Email (Knoxville News Sentinel)
Ethics Charge for 2 Lawyers Over Facebook Friending a Litigant (Employer Handbook)
Workers Put Company and Personal Information on Device, Raising Risk (Sun Sentinel)

Technology and the Law

Hackers Claim to Have 12 Million Apple Device Records, FBI and Apple Deny it (NY Times) (CNN) (CBS)
Can Bruce Willis Leave His iTunes to His Kids? (CNN)
Can You Tag Your Doctor a “Tool” Online? (Without Getting Sued) (Star Tribune) (ABA Journal)
Judge Rules Police Seizure of Text Messages Violates the 4th Amendment (ARS Technica)
Feds Say Mobile-Phone Location Data Not “Constitutionally Protected” (Wired)

There’s an App for That

Your App Kit for the NFL Season (Wired)
Elmo Recruited for App That Helps Potty Train Kids (NBC)
Want to Grill Like a Zillionaire? There’s an App for That (NPR)
Dems Release Voter Registration Apps, Including Open Source Version (Wired)

Primary Sidebar

The Modern Workplace (Go to homepage)

Stay up to date on the latest insights.

Subscribe

    © 2025 Lathrop GPM. All Rights Reserved. Attorney Advertising. Past results do not guarantee future results. Every case is different and should be judged on its own merits. The choice of a lawyer is an important decision and should not be based solely upon advertisements.

    Lathrop GPM LLP, 2345 Grand Boulevard, Kansas City, MO 64108

      Site by
      • Home
      • About
      • Contributors
      • Services
      • Contact