@olympia tennenbaum wrote:
@shopnyc wrote:
I don't know if this would be considered a hack, but I pretty much record audio for every shop I do. Helps with remembering things and getting timings accurate.
I have wondered about this but then wondered about the legality of it. I did do it once for a long shop at kind of a health clinic. I had to be interacting with the practitioner the entire time so there was no way I could use my phone for notes. I did feel a little bad about it later but it really did help me get all the details.
This topic came up a while back.
With one caveat you are allowed to record any conversation that takes place in a PUBLIC setting, even in states that require two-party consent. Conversations that take place within ear shot of others are NOT private and are not subject to two-party consent laws. Some states have additional exceptions; such as, will allow you to covertly record conversations with public officials. If there is clearly a group of people in a public setting attempting to have a private conversation, you could be breaking the law. I say could because court rulings differ on how they treat that situation, and it will frankly come down to a judge or jury should you be charged. Unless you are planning to extort someone or use the recording in some other creepy way, you are not likely to be charged. Even if you were charged, it would not be for the recording, it would be for whatever illegal way you were trying to use the recording. (The recording would be evidence to support the greater crime.)
To make you feel more at ease, think about people who video record their child at a baseball game. Obviously audio is also being recorded, but the two-party consent law does not apply since this takes place in a public setting. Most mystery shops also take place in a public setting where there is no expectation of privacy. You mention recording in a healthcare setting. I presume this was back in the room you were in. I would not feel guilty about that. A lot of times nurses are going to be in the room as well, which would no longer make the conversation private. Although the nurse is medical staff, they are generally not a part of the conversation. In the past year in my private life, I've actually had doctors encourage me to video record things like CAT scans and X-Rays as they go over them with me. When my ENT put a camera down my throat, he had me to record the playback on the screen as he pointed out what was going on with my vocal cords.
Happy recording!
People are not chess pieces that can be manipulated through lies. The lesson is... that anyone who looks upon humanity as if it were a game of chess deserves to lose.
Edited 1 time(s). Last edit at 09/15/2024 06:54PM by ServiceAward.