Business

26% of big tech employees say their companies spy on them unreasonably

Just over a quarter of big tech employees say that their companies go to unreasonable lengths to spy on them, according to a report by Blind.

Employees of some of the 26 biggest names in tech were asked one True or False question on the Blind App: My company goes to unreasonable lengths to monitor employees.

Read More: United Airlines partners with scandal-ridden, CIA-backed Palantir for data initiatives

Companies included the likes of Amazon, Facebook, Google, Apple, and many, many more.

The survey ran from September 20 through October 1, 2018, and was answered by 6,707 users of the Blind app. Users could only answer once.

A little over 1/4 responded that their companies were going to far in monitoring their employees.

Chart by Blind

Here are some key findings:

  • Overall, 25.8% responded with True. 54.12% of Booking.com employees answered with True. This is the highest among any company with at least 50 employee responses, and more than double the overall survey average.
  • Rounding out the five companies with the highest percentage of employees answering with True are Intel (43.45%), Snapchat (40%), PayPal (38.6%) and Veritas (37.74%).
  • Spotify had the lowest percentage of employees feeling their company goes to unreasonable lengths to monitor employees, with just 4.69% of employees answering True.
  • Rounding out the five companies with the lowest percentage of employees feeling their company is spying on them are LinkedIn (10.78%), Adobe (11.54%), Airbnb (14.81%), and Nvidia (16.07%).

Here is the full list of results to the anonymous questionnaire:

Chart by Blind

Blind is an anonymous social network for working professionals.

Its user base includes over 44,000 employees from Microsoft, 30,000 from Amazon, 11,000 from Google, 8,000 from Uber, 8,000 from Facebook, 7,000 from Apple, 5,500 from LinkedIn, and 4,500 from Salesforce, just to name a few.

With such a large user base of tech professionals, it makes it easy to quickly poll these employees about important and popular topics, such as forced arbitration.

Tim Hinchliffe

The Sociable editor Tim Hinchliffe covers tech and society, with perspectives on public and private policies proposed by governments, unelected globalists, think tanks, big tech companies, defense departments, and intelligence agencies. Previously, Tim was a reporter for the Ghanaian Chronicle in West Africa and an editor at Colombia Reports in South America. These days, he is only responsible for articles he writes and publishes in his own name. tim@sociable.co

View Comments

  • Intel spied on their employees? They didn't do a very good job.

    Intel CEO Brian Krzanich was caught for illegal insider trading in Intel stock. Krzanich also had an affair with an employee that was against company policy.

    Would love to see journalists addressing Krzanich and how he slipped through the Intel surveillance multiple times. Did he instruct the surveillance net to be lowered just for himself? Who else was involved?

    Something's going on.

Recent Posts

Are AI chatbots crossing the line? The risks developers need to know ahead of Valentine’s Day

AI chatbots are transforming communication, but recent headlines reveal their darker side: lawsuits over harmful content and reports…

8 hours ago

India’s digital ID architect touts DPI for govt tracking individual finances, vaccine passports

DPI systems can just as easily exclude people from participating in some aspects of society…

8 hours ago

HR execs head to Orlando for HR Management Institute event to help define the future of work 

HR has always had far-reaching responsibilities, however its focus has long been on employee retention…

4 days ago

Longview Fusion Energy Systems Highlighted as Key Contributor in Multiple FIRE Grants

Longview Fusion Energy Systems has announced its role as a key contributor to two of the…

1 week ago

As CFOs battle tough odds, accounting solutions help to drive new efficiencies 

As CFOs battle tough odds, accounting solutions help to drive new efficiencies  More than anything,…

1 week ago

An algorithmic Apple of Discord: DARPA renames Theory of Mind program to ‘Kallisti’

Could 'Kallisti' be the beginning of another Trojan Horse scenario? perspective The US Defense Advanced…

1 week ago