In addition to the challenges highlighted by Rudolph and colleagues (2021) in their focal article, the COVID-19 pandemic has the potential to open the door to violations of worker rights in the name of protecting public health. In this commentary, we focus on violations of privacy as worthy of special consideration. Privacy, or the extent to which an individual has or perceives having control over personal information and the sensory stimuli within their work environment (Bhave et al., 2020), is a topic spanning many domains. Federal law in the United States gives employers extremely wide latitude to collect and store information about employees (United States Department of Labor, n.d.), and advances in microtechnologies and data processing make it possible for employers to do so in an increasingly invasive fashion (Collier, 2018). We know privacy violations are associated with a variety of undesirable work-related attitudes and behaviors (e.g., negative emotions and cognitions, counterproductive work behaviors; Yost et al., 2019); therefore, accounting for the effects of the pandemic on work privacy dynamics is necessary. Below we discuss five work contexts influenced by the COVID-19 pandemic for which privacy concerns are salient, with a particular focus on their implications for research and practice.
Electronic performance monitoringOne implication of the pandemic emergency and the consequent mass transition to telework is that many supervisors can no longer observe their employees throughout the workday via traditional "management by walking around." Much attention from the popular press has focused on organizations turning to electronic performance monitoring (EPM) software to track individuals as they work remotely (e.g., Allyn, 2020;Satariano, 2020) in an attempt to satisfy the need to see exactly what their employees are doing. At the anecdotal level, the subjects of these press pieces express discomfort with their organizations tracking their behaviors in their own home, particularly when the monitoring is secretive or may capture non-work-related information. There is some evidence that the relationship between EPM use and perceptions of privacy invasion may vary based on whether non-work-related information is captured (e.g,. McNall & Roch, 2007), but the pandemic presents opportunities to better understand the monitoring characteristics that individuals perceive as unacceptable, particularly when monitoring occurs in their home, and how they may respond to such intrusions.Existing work on EPM offers some guidance on how organizations should implement monitoring during these times. Research generally suggests that well-understood best practices in human resource management such as honesty and procedural transparency should continue to guide how organizations monitor workers, regardless of the temptation of electronic surveillance devices (e.g., Oswald et al., 2020; Yost et al., 2019). Individuals tend to feel their