Skip to main content

Text Message Ruling Upholds Privacy

In a ruling which could have significant implications for workplace privacy policies, a federal circuit court has ruled (PDF) that employees have a reasonable right to privacy for messages they receive that aren’t stored by the employer or someone the employer pays to store messages. To peer into such messages, companies would need a warrant or the employee’s permission—and that may set of a flurry of writing as company seek to update their privacy policies to grant themselves access to text messages and communications outside their physical control.

The decision comes from the rather complicated case of Quon vs. Arch Wireless, wherein Jeff Quon, a member of the Ontario, California, SWAT team (and some of the people he exchanged messages with) sued the city for accessing the contents of messages sent over a text messaging pager issued by the city. Employees were expected to pay for any charges running over the service plan’s character limits, and in an effort to determine whether the plan’s limit was too low, the city requested (and received) a copy of all messages send over the service. The city discovered many of Quon’s messages were both personal and of an adult nature.

The case centered on the Stored Communications Act, which defines both remote computer services and electronics communications services; Arch Wireless argued it was a remote computing service, and therefore wasn’t violating any privacy rights when it turned over communications to the city, who it considered to be the “subscriber” in this case. The circuit court disagreed, finding that an electronic communications service could also involve data processing more common to a remote computing service. Thus, the court considers a broad range of electronic communications to fall under the same privacy protections as letters and phone calls, where the recipient and dimensions of a message may be public knowledge, but the contents remain private.

If the ruling stands, enterprises, governments, and organizations are generally expected to revise their privacy policies such that employees must agree to surrender their privacy rights and grant access to any messages transmitted over employer-owned or employer-issued messaging systems.

Editors' Recommendations

Geoff Duncan
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Geoff Duncan writes, programs, edits, plays music, and delights in making software misbehave. He's probably the only member…
What is RCS messaging? A briefing on the SMS successor
Google Messages app on a Pixel 8 Pro, showing an RCS Chat message thread.

Text messaging has been around in some form for more than 30 years. In fact, the technology powering many of today's messaging systems is old and (frankly) outdated, and there's a lot of history behind those adorable emojis and your ability to create group chats.

But what's the difference between Short Messaging Services (SMS) and Multimedia Messaging Services (MMS)? And what about the newer Rich Communication Services (RCS)? More importantly, why should you care, and how does all this impact iPhone and Android users? Here's a closer look at these unique messaging platforms and how they impact your ability to chat with friends and family.
The history of text messaging

Read more
How to make a contact group on an iPhone to message multiple people
Close-up of the cameras on the iPhone 15 Pro Max.

iPhone has a bunch of cool features, but few are as useful as contact groups. As of iOS 16, Apple lets you pool contacts together into groups, making it easy to spam out messages to family, friends, or colleagues without needing to tinker with a bunch of clunky settings. You don't even need any extra software or apps – as long as you're running iOS 16 or later, you can quickly make a contact group on your iPhone.

Read more
How to stop spam texts on iPhone and Android phones
iPhone showing a spam text with the Report Junk option.

Everyone from legitimate marketers to outright scammers wants to get your attention these days. With a mobile phone in nearly every pocket, many of these have turned to SMS text messages as a way to extend their reach. After all, it's a fast means of communication that's much more likely to be noticed than traditional email messages. Plus, there aren't nearly as many spam filtering solutions available for dealing with text messages, making them ripe for abuse. Here, we explore your options for reducing spam, depending on your phone type.

Read more