So my question would be, if I quit at work and I still have things from my work on my private cell phone, but I'll delete them anyway! May my boss then ask me to delete all my mobile data? Because a colleague should put her whole hard drive back on her old laptop
You do not have any operational stuff on your private devices anyway.
No.
The situation is different with clients.
Even a possible service instruction or agreement should not be tenable there.
All in all, it depends on what regulations there were and how they were respected, if one intends to act legally.
Yes, the problem is that my boss always wanted to get something sent from the office to his WhatsApp, so are now and then things in my course
Private and professional things should also be separated by hardware, if that does not work, then use partitioned disks…
Clarify this when about your lawyer or pull you from your private (excluding PRIVATE) data backup, reset your device and play back the backup of private data, without your ex-boss since big wind from gets.
If the device belongs to the employer: definitely.
If it is a private device, it will depend on the regulation on the use of private devices by your employer.
Then he should put a service device
How do business matters get on your private cell phone? That's why you're thrown out!
BYOD is not a term?
Kind. But we all live in a real world.
Then there will be guidelines in this company to which the employee has agreed…
Exactly - and in the real world such things are regulated BEFORE…
If my boss keeps asking me if I can send him the email or others via WhatsApp, is that the case? That does not mean that I secretly take pictures of you and use them for other purposes! Thinking would be good too!
Then I would ask the boss how it should work because I reluctant to have company internal on my private phone - just for privacy reasons…
Yes, thinking would be good indeed!
Which always happens in a perfect world.
Only in the real world does it look quite different.
Had, bike chain would have
Operational data on private devices is more standard than an exception.
Theoretical ideal thought constructs do not help in such a case.
Practical regulations help in such a case thoroughly…
And if it's standard, then there are regulations…
Wrong - in the real world, only stupid important things deal with a contract.