How to Protect Confidential Information - Privacy in the Workplace

by Diana L. Martin

If you work with sensitive information, you undoubtedly need ways to keep that information away from unauthorized eyes.  File drawers and office doors can be locked - that's an obvious solution.  But you also need to keep the information on your computer screen private while you work.  

Privacy filters are not new, but they are necessary for many of you.  When you're selecting one, be sure that you don't confuse privacy filters with anti-glare filters - they are not the same thing.  Some anti-glare filters do also offer privacy protection, but many are just plain anti-glare.

We offer several different manufacturers of privacy filters.  Today I would like to showcase Business Source brand.  Blackout privacy filters are the best for protecting confidential information. These filters completely black out the image on the screen when viewed from the side, but it's crystal clear to anyone viewing it straight on, which hopefully, is just you. The filter also protects the screen from scratches and fingerprints.

The most common question I get in regard to monitor filters is "Can you help me figure out what size to buy?"  That question usually comes from someone who has already purchased one and it doesn't fit their screen and they don't know what they did wrong.  It's the single most common reason that filters are returned to us.   There is a wide range of sizes available and to find the proper size, you need to remember that when the description says "Fits 19" monitors," that doesn't mean the width of the monitor screen.  The dimension listed refers to the diagonal measurement of the viewable area of the screen (from upper left corner to lower right corner).  The viewable area is just the screen itself - don't include the monitor frame when you're measuring it if you have the type of monitor that has a raised edge frame.

The other consideration in choosing the correct size is to know the aspect ratio of your monitor. A 19" monitor with a 16:9 ratio will have a smaller display area than a 19" monitor with a 4:3 ratio.  Most newer monitors and laptops are 16:9 or 16:10 but some are 21:9, 5:4 or 4:3.  If your monitor/laptop doesn't have the screen ratio printed on it, you can determine it by doing a simple calculation using the resolution, but it would probably be faster and easier to just ask your IT people.

Lastly, and very importantly, if you don't remember anything else that I've said here, remember this - even if you have a privacy filter on your computer, your boss still has ways to find out if you're playing Candy Crush on company time!

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