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Hybrid work hack: as mouse jigglers fool employee monitoring software, bosses fight back

  • Online tutorials, sales of gadgets to fake keyboard activity multiply as employers install software to monitor remote workers’ productivity

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Mouse Mover, a mouse jiggler of the type remote workers use to fool employee monitoring software installed on company computers by employers. Gadgets like this, and online tutorials promoting other ways to fake working, have proliferated. Photo: YouTube/Lo Knows Tech

A US banking giant fired more than a dozen employees for “simulating keyboard activity”, highlighting a battle within productivity-obsessed corporate America to tame a culture of faking work with gizmos such as mouse jigglers.

Employers are using sophisticated tools – popularly called “tattleware” or “bossware” – on company-issued devices to monitor productivity in the age of hybrid work that took off after the Covid-19 pandemic.

Some workers seek to outsmart them with tools such as mouse movers – which simulate cursor movement, preventing their devices from going into sleep mode and making them appear active when they may actually be getting a power nap or doing laundry.

This has spurred a wider debate in corporate America about whether screen time and the click-clacking of keyboards are effective yardsticks to measure productivity amid a boom in remote work.

A Wells Fargo Bank in San Francisco. The bank recently dismissed some staff after allegations of “keyboard fraud”. Photo: Shutterstock
A Wells Fargo Bank in San Francisco. The bank recently dismissed some staff after allegations of “keyboard fraud”. Photo: Shutterstock

The Wells Fargo workers were dismissed last month following a probe of allegations involving “simulation of keyboard activity creating impression of active work”, Bloomberg reported, citing the company’s disclosures to financial regulators.

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