RIM records all employee calls

Summary: BlackBerry maker Research in Motion admitted yesterday that it recorded all employee conversations in the interest of maintaining control over intellectual property.

BlackBerry maker Research in Motion admitted yesterday that it recorded all employee conversations in the interest of maintaining control over intellectual property.

Paul Donovan

RIM CIO Robin Bienfait (Credit: RIM)

RIM chief information officer Robin Bienfait, during an interview with ZDNet.com.au in Sydney, said that all actions carried out on RIM's internal network were logged, which meant that people who wanted to carry out private conversations might want to bring in personal devices.

"Everything I have that's on RIM is recorded and retained as RIM. So if they want to have a chat with somebody and it's not a chat that's within RIM's domain, then they may want their own personal device," she said.

When asked exactly whether it was conversations, rather than just written information she kept tabs on, Bienfait answered: "Everything. I record everything."

It wasn't a violation of privacy according to Bienfait, who maintained the workers were aware of the surveillance: "They're doing business inside of RIM. Everything they can say or do can be patented... We're not violating anybody's privacy. They're aware that their information is transparent and in visibility."

She added that as a company reliant on its intellectual property, RIM had to be careful. "Their running anything on the RIM network or in our space is something that we have to capture because of disclosure," the executive said.

There is also a high level of caution around the pre-release beta devices which circulate around for employees to act as testers and users. Employees have to keep the devices out of sight when they go off campus so as to avoid people taking photos of the new technology. "We have to trust that they guard it," the CIO said.

Sometimes, breaches have occurred, followed by quick action on the part of the company. "We go take a look at whatever the breach or the leak is and we track it back to who or whatever caused it and we take whatever necessary action," Bienfait said.

I can't melt it from the sky yet. I would like that.

RIM CIO Robin Bienfait

Generally, however, employees were quick to say when their devices had been lost in a taxi, she said. "Our people are really, really good. They know their obligations as a beta tester."

In such cases, RIM would wipe the device immediately, so that it was just a piece of hardware. "I can't melt it from the sky yet. I would like that," Bienfait said.

Employees needed to enjoy the opportunity to work with the devices they had a part in manufacturing, since staff can only use BlackBerry devices for work. Bienfait said she had never had to deal with a request to put the iPhone on the network.

She said it freed her from some of the problems which plagued other companies, where IT departments had needed to deal with people wanting devices to be hooked up to the network which might compromise security. "I think it is a challenge for the industry to be able to manage some of the Gen Ys," she admitted.

Yet the eat-home-cooking law didn't hamper employee individuality, Bienfait believed, as employees ran rampant with the customisation of their devices. "You can be an individual in our space. You just have to use one of the BlackBerry form factors," she said.

Topics: BlackBerry, Legal, Mobility

About

Suzanne Tindal cut her teeth at ZDNet.com.au as the site's telecommunications reporter, a role that saw her break some of the biggest stories associated with the National Broadband Network process. She then turned her attention to all matters in government and corporate ICT circles. Now she's taking on the whole gamut as news editor for the site.

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Talkback

6 comments
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  • Naziberry

    Every conversation..WTF...next they will barcode their employees heads...or has it already happened?
    anonymous
  • Illegal

    This would be illegal in Australia!
    anonymous
  • taping of phone conversations

    Although this is a terrible, terrible thing to do to anyone, Verizon (the bloodiest, deadliest and most corrupt corporation in the world) is the grandfather of all crimes. That bloody Z is representative of everything they'll do to you from A to Z. Their wicked employees traced my family's telephone lines after I fled with my children from my abusive husband and I was forced back for more abuse. My husband committed suicide and because of my mental state at that time they were able to and did beat me and my children out of his pension and other money. I wanted to talk to Raymond W. Smith, CEO of the company but was told by employees that he'd never talk to me because he ws "too rich". I met him at the annual celebration of the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.'s birthday and he arranged for me to meet with a fake Vice President of the company to arrange for me to receive my husband's money. To make a long story short, I never received it and I believe the money is in the bloody bank account of Mr. Smith with the rest of his blood-soaked and stolen money.
    anonymous
  • Staff monitoring

    A "friend" has told me of their company monitoring all emails. We're talking non-specific and absolutely useless monitoring of all emails, which is dealt with in an indiscreet manner. They label it voyeuristic of their HR, who has been known to discuss personal employee emails in the lunchroom after the employee has left the company!
    anonymous
  • CORRECTION

    I read on at least two other sites that RIM officially denied that they record employee phone calls.
    anonymous
  • Storm Watch

    RIM is corrupt from the top down. Blackberry's will soon fall to the emerging smartphones. Their Storm was a complete failure and their support teams are a joke.

    They monitor their employees? Just another cold hard fact released to the public about the evil empire.
    anonymous