What would you do if an employee came to you and told you she was being cyberstalked and cyberharassed at work? Who within the company would you inform? What would you tell the employee? What actions would you instruct the IT department to take? Like all online risks in the workplace, the time to think about this is before something like this happens, not after.
To make sure you're in a proactive rather than reactive position, you need to do some due diligence before a cyberstalker targets one of your employees. Ask yourself:
Just as most employers are addressing workplace-safety and crime-prevention issues, they must address cyberstalking as well. It may be the precursor to an offline attack of an employee or the beginning of attacks against a company or that company's executives.
Providing a safer work environment isn't only good risk management, it's good human-resource management and a morale booster.
Parry Aftab is a cyberspace lawyer, specializing in online privacy and security law, and she's also executive director of WiredSafety. She hosts the Web site aftab.com and blogs regularly at theprivacylawyer.blogspot.com.
Continue to the sidebars: Understanding The Cyberharassment Problem and
To discuss this column with other readers, please visit the Talk Shop.
To find out more about Parry Aftab, please visit her page on the Listening Post.
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Tips To Avoid Cyberstalking
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