Suing workers for allegedly disclosing company secrets via the Internet.
Published:
9 March 1999 y., Tuesday
A lawsuit brought by defense contractor Raytheon Corp. is raising questions about the wisdom of chatting about one_s employer online. The corporation is suing 21 people for allegedly disclosing company secrets via the Internet. Raytheon officials believe the online chatters work for the company, and have asked Yahoo! Inc. to identify the real names behind the electronic handles. Yahoo! runs the offending chat group, but isn_t eager to unmask its clientele. A spokeswoman for Santa Clara, Calif.-based Yahoo!, said the company will comply with a subpoena if one is issued, but otherwise won_t disclose a user_s identification. The case underscores a difficulty with Internet chat groups, which encourage the kinds of conversations that might otherwise take place after work in a bar. The electronic message boards create an illusion of privacy that can embolden people to broadcast their thoughts all over the world. That_s exactly what Raytheon wants to keep its employees from doing -- at least when it comes to information about the company. The messages revealed what Raytheon -- a $19.5 billion company with 100,000 employees -- claims are company secrets, mostly about manpower projections and financial issues. In the complaint filed in Middlesex Superior Court in Cambridge last month, Raytheon_s lawyers claimed the workers violated their employment agreements by disclosing confidential information. But much of the information revealed was either speculative, inaccurate or already public.
Šaltinis:
Internet
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.
The most popular articles
Today, the Commission published a Communication which outlines the most serious tax problems that EU citizens face in cross-border situations and announces plans for solutions.
more »
The European Commission has opened a formal investigation under EU state aid rules to examine a number of support measures, including several capital injections and shareholder loans, that the Hungarian authorities granted to Malév-Hungarian Airlines in the context of its privatisation and subsequent renationalisation.
more »
Internet and lax customs enforcement drive growth of 600 billion US dollar counterfeit goods industry.
more »
350 million people rose out of poverty in the past decade, but 1.4 billion are still extremely poor, says the latest report into rural poverty.
more »
New plan sets out action to reach 75% employment target for the EU by 2020.
more »
Research Ministers of the EU Member States and Associated Countries, together with the European Commission, are announcing in Brussels today three new pan–European energy research infrastructures.
more »
Algirdas Šemeta, Commissioner for Taxation, Customs, Audit and Anti-fraud, is visiting Moscow today to discuss ways in which customs cooperation between the EU and Russia can be reinforced.
more »
Following on from Monday's debate with ECB President Jean-Claude Trichet, MEPs on Tuesday adopted a resolution, by a show of hands, gauging the ECB's performance in 2009 and suggesting actions to be taken in view of the economic situation.
more »
The European Parliament today approved €10.5 million in European Globalisation Adjustment Fund aid to over 3,000 people in the Netherlands who lost their printing and publishing sector jobs last year, due to the economic crisis.
more »
A diamond-studded gold coin engraved with a picture of the Taj Mahal and worth 100,000 euros is unveiled at the Paris mint.
more »