Certain jobs I would. fire, police
Most jobs I would not
A loosely moderated place to ask open-ended questions
Search asklemmy π
If your post meets the following criteria, it's welcome here!
Looking for support?
Looking for a community?
~Icon~ ~by~ ~@Double_A@discuss.tchncs.de~
Imagine an 8 hour livestream of someone banging their head on the keyboard until the code magically fixes itself. Very fun.
Same here. But imagine if you were living in The Fifth Element world of mega-corps. They tell you to wear a camera so they can tell when you're not working...
There's monitoring software like that already.
Either they will leave me alone, or they're gonna end up like Evil Corp. Considering my workplace is a Major Bank, it would make sense.
are you ready to wear one?
I'm ready to make an elton john style jacket full of infrared leds
What's stopping you? You do you.
I fucking love this idea!!!
Absolutely not, as that would mean my company violates my country's privacy laws. In my field of work there is no valid reason for wearing a body cam.
Na, I work in IT we have more appropriate spyware than body cameras can ever be.
I work in cinema, recording devices of any ilk are satan and cannot be allowed anywhere near content
ominous
Absolutely not. You can justify it with whatever reasoning you want, but it would be used against employees far more than it helps employees.
Preach. It wasnβt body cams but our company gave us all mandatory phones with custom location tracking software on them. It was done as part of their pandemic response. The phones were supposedly only tracking your location within a mile of the site and were only used for enforcing social distancing and infection tracking. Well when the return to office mandates came around, upper management was suddenly too informed about how much time we spent onsite. They swore up and down it wasnβt the phones and went to pretty absurd lengths to find some other metric to prove it.
If I had to deal with that, the phone would be in a faraday box with a router that connected to a VPN that cycled servers every 24hrs.
Every day they would think I was in a different country.
Absolutely not. I like my current job, but if body cams became mandatory, Iβd quit. Iβd get ready to leave if they were ever even βtestedβ at another location.
You want this for DOCTORS? You want your private health information record like this? Are you freaking nuts?
It'd be on record by the same organisation that has access to your medical records anyway. Doctors are frequently known for abuse of power over disabled patients, trans patients, racialised patients, etc, so it makes it easier to take action against negligent/abusive doctors.
Hell no, cops however should have less control over the cameras they wear.
body cams only make any sense when you're not in a fixed location and already always on camera, or when there's commonly abuses of power off camera. both are true of cops. neither are true of the cashiers at Hot Topic or whatever.
I've actually considered it, mainly because it'd be useful for me to document what I do and how while keeping my hands free.
My job involves a lot of hardware troubleshooting, and when people ask me a year later when and how some specific issue was resolved, it'd be a whole lot easier to check the tape.
Yes, taking notes is possible, but when you're troubleshooting an industrial system, and downtime costs 40.000$ per hour, updating your diary isn't exactly a priority.
I don't really have much of a privacy aspect to worry about - the only time it'd be beneficial for anyone would be while doing field work, and at that time I usually have 10-20 people watching and waiting anyway.
I haven't found a durable camera that I can wear discreetly, though.
I would absolutely, categorically, stop doing business wherever I see employees wearing bodycams.
That depends... who controls the footage?
If it's my employer, absolutely not unless the job is high liability already because then it becomes a liability for me when somebody else controls my data.
If it's just for me, sure I would wear it if it's not too much trouble and I have concerns.
Hell no. That would turn anything other than unflinching obsequiousness towards obnoxious clients and potential fraudsters into a firing offense. Specially in the already dystopian US job market.
Where I work; the public facing staff, security and customer service roles, are now offered to wear one at the start of their shift. They all want to use one.
These workers face abuse - physical assault, threats, harassment - from members of the public.
What has been found is that when they turn the body worn camera on, the other person tends to stop the abuse or at least de-escalates somewhat. (Prior to having body worn cameras available, some of these staff had tried to use their phone to film when in an incident, but it almost always triggered an immediate violent response - one staff had their phone taken and smashed, another was hit in the face)
There has been a decrease in mental health injury claims since using these. My own talks with these staff are that they feel safer, and had asked their employer to procure more body worn cameras as there wasnβt enough for all the staff.
The staff are not required to have them constantly on, they press a button to switch it on when an aggressive situation is forming or they believe they are in danger.
Why doctors? Filming patients would be a nightmare in terms of privacy and data policy.
In my line of work (psychotherapy) it would be equally impossible. People are having a hard enough time as it is opening up to medical professionals, I don't think that the additional barrier of being actively filmed would help anyone.
I used to wear one on the railway. We had these ones that you switch on with a big, loud sliding clasp on it, so if someone starts acting a bit shirty, you could often deter them just by starting the recording (which held the previous 30 seconds or something in its memory).
Makes sense, especially if you trusted the organization to use the video to defend you, not just cover their own butts.
There are things that I do where a body cam would be useful, but I wouldn't wear it for office work.
.
I might be wearing my own small, undetectable body cam, to protect myself against workplace harassment, racism, and unfair labor practices.
I'm a walking, talking landmine for those bastards. /S
Never.
The ticket checkers (or whatever they are called) wear them here. I guess primarily for their own safety because people can get really mad at them.
A few of the supermarkets in my country have this as an option for staff. Since the pandemic there's been an alarming rise in public attacking shop staff.
In the jobs I work at, no, I wouldn't. Body cams would only be used to snitch on people. It makes sense for surveillance to be used over people in positions of power like cops, doctors, prison guards, etc, who are known for abusing their power. Not against ordinary people or members of the public though. If retail workers wear bodycams, it's to snitch on shoplifters. If teachers wear bodycams it'd compromise kids who approach them to tell them something in confidence. Etc.
Sure. Why not? It will probably work like it does with US police officers, magically turning off right before the ~~murder takes place~~ self defence happens.
Seriously, I wouldnβt care at all. But itβs still a stupid idea and I would strongly oppose it. Even if only in solidarity with people it would fuck over.
"Self defence"
Plot twist: you work at Home Depot.
Depends on the pay differential and other options. I think it's less useful for positions in my career, but it's not an absolute no.
If I got paid double to wear one, sure. Other than that, no.
I donβt think itβs going to happen that way. Body cams are needed if you want to record people working in the field, such as police officers, but for people working at a fixed location, an office or factory or what have you, CCTV cameras are cheaper, less intrusive, and harder for a bad actor to screw with by βaccidentallyβ covering their lens or forgetting to turn their unit on.
Everyone in the building wears one regardless.
My management or owners are not allowed to see the content and it can only be reviewed by a third party arbitration.
If the camera is off I might as well be dead to my employers and coworkers.
My pay increases proportionally to the success of the business.