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	<title>Articles&gt;Business Communication&gt;Privacy</title>	<link>http://tc.eserver.org/dir/Articles/Business-Communication/Privacy</link>
	<description>A listing of the most recently indexed works about Articles and Business Communication and Privacy in the field of technical communication.</description>
	<language>en-us</language>
	<copyright>Copyright (c) 2005-08 by the EServer. All rights reserved.</copyright>
	<managingEditor>tclib-editorial@eserver.org (TC Library Editorial Board)</managingEditor>
	<webMaster>webmaster@eserver.org (Geoffrey Sauer)</webMaster>
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		<title>Articles&gt;Business Communication&gt;Privacy</title>
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		<title>Bloggers&apos; Alert: Confidentiality and Disclosure in the Workplace</title>
		<link>http://tc.eserver.org/31427.html</link>
		<guid>http://tc.eserver.org/31427.html</guid>
		<description>First it was e-mail messages, next it was PDA messaging, and now it is blogs. These networking tools are all widely used by employees. They also sometimes become a source of contentious litigation when employers become concerned over the risk of corporate liability and public disclosure of confidential information that these new technologies pose.</description>
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		<title>Privacy Laws and Communication</title>
		<link>http://tc.eserver.org/31467.html</link>
		<guid>http://tc.eserver.org/31467.html</guid>
		<description>With the advent of the Internet and the ability to send personal information to many places in very little time, privacy has become an important issue for businesses across the globe. How to retain the free flow of information without violating an individual’s right to privacy is a difficult balance to strike and one that different countries approach in various ways.</description>
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		<title>The Rhetoric of Misdirection in Corporate Privacy-Policy Statements</title>
		<link>http://tc.eserver.org/29243.html</link>
		<guid>http://tc.eserver.org/29243.html</guid>
		<description>U.S. businesses wish to continue to profit by collecting personal information from their website visitors, yet they fear that the practice both alienates visitors and exposes them both to legal problems from U.S. authorities and business sanctions from data-privacy authorities in Europe and Canada. This dilemma is reflected in the typical corporate privacy-policy statement, which is full of misleading and deceptive rhetoric intended to cover up the gap between the company&apos;s privacy policy and the image it wishes to project.</description>
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