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Why You Should Think Twice Before You Bring Your Device to Work

Bringing personal devices into a work environment can be a legal minefield, no two ways about it. Rather than dealing with the myriad questions that arise from the business-side perspective, we’ll assume you’re someone who works for a company that has already decided to allow people to bring their personal devices to work. Unfortunately, just because you can, doesn’t necessarily mean you will ultimately want to. We hope to educate you on what you would want to be aware of before you agree to use your personal device for business purposes.

There is one thing you need to be very clear on before using your device to access corporate resources: from a legal perspective, your device and data ceases to be your own.

The company may:

From the company’s perspective, what they’re trying to do is to protect themselves against any problems due to loss of data or misuse of corporate resources. This is especially problematic with mobile devices since theft and loss is a whole lot more common than with desktops.

It’s one thing when these actions are applied to a corporate-issued laptop. It’s a whole other matter when it’s a personal cellphone that has pictures of little Johnny’s first birthday party plus contact info for all your friends and family. And what if this device is something you share with family members? If corporate policy mandates passcodes with remote wipes for too many incorrect guesses, what happens if Johnny tries to play a game on your machine and tries to guess the passcode? There goes everything.

The first (and most important) thing you can do is to fully understand your company’s Acceptable Use Policy before you agree to connect your device to their network. You should be able to answer all of the following questions, and if not, keep asking until you fully understand:

There are things you can do to ease potential problems with putting your phone and data under corporate control:

Has your company allowed a Bring Your Own Device policy? If so, have you used it? Do you think it’s convenient or intrusive?

photo credit: Simon Adriaensen via photopin cc

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