@article{da24941b-cfbf-45a7-9907-12f87b94752a, author = {Matthew Finkin}, title = {The Acquisition and Dissemination of Employee Data: the Law of the European Union and the United States Compared}, journal = {Studia z Zakresu Prawa Pracy i Polityki Społecznej (Studies on Labour Law and Social Policy)}, volume = {2015}, number = {Vol. 22}, year = {2015}, issn = {1429-9585}, pages = {1-1},keywords = {civility; dignity; informational self-determination; negative right; omnibus standards; privacy; positive right; right to be forgotten; right to be left alone; social media; targeted rules}, abstract = {This essay presents a schematic comparing the legal approach to employer acquisition and dissemination of applicant and employee information in the European Union and the United States.  The schematic sets out seven analytical heads: source of law; scope; form; means of effectuation; conceptual grounding; valence; and the relationship of privacy protection to the freedom of expression.  The essay then examines the meaning of these categories and explores the commonalities and differences between the E.U. and the U.S. under each of them.  It concludes by taking up a common problem: employer access to and use of applicant and employee social media communications.  That specific comparison, on a current and pressing issue, breathes life into the analytical differences and shows that, despite the differences, the actual result "on the ground," so to speak, may not differ significantly; that the remedial situation in both systems may render the protection they afford illusory.}, doi = {}, url = {https://ejournals.eu/czasopismo/szppips/artykul/the-acquisition-and-dissemination-of-employee-data-the-law-of-the-european-union-and-the-united-states-compared} }