A
California woman is suing her former employer after she claims she was
fired for uninstalling a smartphone app that let her boss track her
movements 24 hours a day, 365 days a year.
According to Ars Technica, which obtained a copy of the complaint, Myrna Arias worked for the Intermex wire transfer service
when she says her boss, John Stubits, fired her for deleting the Xora
(now ClickSoftware) job management app from her smartphone.
In the suit Arias claims that the app allowed Intermex and Stubits to track her movement whether she was working or not.
Arias
said that when she and her fellow employees asked Stubits if he could
track them when they weren’t working, Stubits, “admitted that employees
would be monitored while off duty and bragged that he knew how fast she
was driving at specific moments ever since she had installed the app on
her phone.”
According
to the suit, Arias didn’t have a problem with the app tracking her
while she was working, but didn’t want it doing so when she was off.
Doing so, Arias said, amounted to an invasion of privacy.
Xora, the app that Arias complained about, tracks and manages mobile employees while they’re in the field.
Arias said she is seeking payment for lost wages and punitive damages.
We reached out to Intermex, and will update this article when we receive a response.
The
proliferation of smartphones and our always-connected culture have
given rise to a number of privacy issues and complaints. Social media
users continuously argue that Facebook and Twitter regularly invade
users’ privacy, while similar allegations have been made against major
smartphone makers and websites.
The
difference here is that Arias was required to install an app on her
handset by her employer, something more and more companies require their
workers to do in order to protect corporate data stored on their
smartphones.
Do
you think Arias should have been fired for not using the app, as her
suit alleges? Should employers be able to track workers when they’re not
on the job? Sound off in the comments.
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