HomeInsightsEuropean Court of Human Rights finds that monitoring an employee’s electronic communications amounts to a breach of his right to private life and correspondence

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The case concerned the decision of a private company in Romania to dismiss an employee after monitoring his electronic communications and accessing their contents, and the alleged failure of the domestic courts to protect his right to respect for his private life and correspondence.

The European Court of Human Rights held, by eleven votes to six, that there had been a violation of Article 8 (right to respect for private and family life, the home and correspondence) of the European Convention on Human Rights.

The Court concluded that the national authorities had not adequately protected Mr Barbulescu’s right to respect for his private life and correspondence. They had consequently failed to strike a fair balance between the interests at stake.

In particular, the ECtHR said, the national courts had failed to determine whether Mr Barbulescu had received prior notice from his employer of the possibility that his communications might be monitored; nor had they had regard either to the fact that he had not been informed of the nature or the extent of the monitoring, or to the degree of intrusion into his private life and correspondence.

In addition, the national courts had failed to determine, first, the specific reasons justifying the introduction of the monitoring measures; secondly, whether the employer could have used measures entailing less intrusion into Mr Barbulescu’s private life and correspondence; and thirdly, whether the communications might have been accessed without his knowledge. (Barbulescu v. Romania (application no. 61496/08) (5 September 2017) — to read the judgment in full, click here).

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