Scott,

Just as a preface, this is what or company does, we are a third party call monitoring quality assurance service.

The law applies pretty much the same whether it is B2B or B2C. The difference really comes in the case of recording or tapping.

Typically if recording happens as a matter of practice in a business, the HR gets a new hire to sign a waiver. This protects the business in a one party condition from an employee coming back and challenging a dismissal or reprimand. I had this happen to a client, where we caught the employee continually putting clients on hold so she could continue a personal conversation with another employee, resulting in the employee being dismissed. The employee sued for invasion of privacy, they settled since they didn't have a signed waiver.

So, since you may consider it standard practice, doesn't mean the employee, the client or the courts will see it that way. AKA make sure you cover your ass!

Mike

Scott Ivory wrote:

Great comments.. thanks everyone.

A lot of this looks like it applies more to Business to Consumer calls which deals with very strict privacy laws (rightfully so).

All calls through this box are B to B which I imagine to be a whole different ball game. Has anyone come across information that distinguishes the law between B to C and B to B?

Recording in the office is standard practice. I don't know too many sales forces that don't record at least some of their calls for training purposes. It's too powerful of a tool.

Thanks,

Scott

------------------------------------------------------------------------

*From:* Mike Ashton [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
*Sent:* Saturday, July 22, 2006 8:15 AM
*To:* [email protected]
*Subject:* Re: [on-asterisk] recording in asterisk

Duane,

You are right that it is not just that simple, I was just trying to highlight some of the complexities.

Some links to look at:

http://www.rcfp.org/taping/
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Telephone_tapping
http://www.callcorder.com/phone-recording-law.htm

And even in some of these links you will get some contradictions in the states listed. This can be due to the dates the data was collected, and/or the collectors inaccuracy.

Mike

Duane wrote:

Mike Ashton wrote:


Say the other person was in Maryland, well they have a totally inclusive two party law ( everyone on call needs to be aware in the case of a conference call ). So if you don't make the person in Maryland aware, then your breaking Maryland State law, even if your initiating the call from Ontario.


Actually it's not that simple, when it comes to inter-state in the US, you fall under US federal laws which tends to side with one party rather then two party consent...

There was a website on US laws regarding recording of calls but I can't seem to find it at present...


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