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Workplace implements AI-powered cameras to track employee's every move, reprimands them for tiny details

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    A security camera mounted on the side of a building
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    I found out today that my job is using Al cameras meant for asset protection to also use as workplace management trackers that tracks everything we do at work.

    Today I received an email referencing a specific day that I clocked out 15 minutes later than my scheduled time and I was flagged for not "working" during that 15 minute window. I thought this was weird considering at my job we sometimes have to leave a little later than our scheduled time due to the nature of the job
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    (customer service heavy). This email was also a reminder that every time I do this again, I will be documented and written up for. This was the first email I ever received of anything like this in the almost 5 years of being with the company. I discussed this
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    with my coworker and they also had a similar occurrence where they started receiving emails about the times they were taking their lunch were not during the "approved and scheduled time" (they were taking them before her 5th hour just not during when our employer scheduled it on the application we use to clock in and out).
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    We were disclosed that these cameras were going to be used for asset protection and to protect us and the customers. My ass.... I'm disturbed and also frustrated that this was implemented at work with almost no one knowing that this could be used against us.
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    Mass surveying of employees for the sole purpose of tracking productivity should seriously be illegal, how the f is this even a thing? How did we get here as a society where employers have more rights over our own privacy? Is there anything I can do? How is this even legal?
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    A woman works at a warehouse
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    Commenters gave their takes and insight.

    Grant Winner_Extra It's bad policy but totally legal in the US anyway. Next time, request formal permission - send an email: "I am with a customer helping them mle a
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    purchase decision. Policy says I must clock out exactly at [Time]. Should I just leave or do I stay with the customer? Per your last email, if I don't get permission, I will just have to walk away from the customer mid-conversation.
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    Or something like that, real time. Alternately could get customer to complain about the policy.
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    thenord321 The asset is rhe company's money, they are "protexting" it from wage theft, checkin times, schedule adherence, all bs micromanaging techniques. You ahould find and present them data that this kind if micromanaging leads to low moral and worse productivity long term.
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    kissyb The malicious compliance would start and I would get my coworkers on board. Email them even for lunch breaks. Let's play
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    oz_mouse You need to be looking for another job
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    digiorno Human resources, they consider humans to be a resource and a resource is an asset. Hence when they track assets, they also mean they will track you.
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    Moontoya Ive heard rumours to the effect that camera CCDs _ really_ dont like laser pointers being shone on them.
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    wraithnix Ugh. My company does the same thing, only without the Al. Once a month, we get an "audit" where someone watches all the cameras for an entire shift, and dings us for everything we mess up.
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    Mirrormaster85 Jesus, thats dystopian. Is that legal in Murrica?
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    TDiffRob6876 Preventing theft of time is a form of Asset Protection. Most forms of theft are internal vs external.

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