As a journalist, I sometimes record telephone calls of people I interview, always with their permission, of course. (I live less than five miles from where Linda Tripp used to live, so I have had occasion to learn about the laws of recording telephone calls in the Free State.)
However, the following entirely theoretical situation came to my mind the other day. As we all know, when calling corporate customer support lines we often hear the line, “This call may be recorded or monitored for quality control purposes.” By continuing without objection, the caller give his consent to being recorded.
My question is, since both parties have given consent to being recorded by one, does the other need permission from the first to make his own recording?
I understand this probably varies by location, but I’m curious if there’s an implied reciprocity to the consent one party gives, or if a case can be made for it.
I waould assume a law adresses the right to privacy and undue intrusion of the state. Any conversation in the presence of a third party renders expectation of privacy a moot point.
I would assume that announcing the recording of a conversation in the name of quality control to be a common enough occurence and simply voicing an objection to such a recording easy enough to establish if things ever got into a courtroom.
Thanks, Duckster, I had found that site, but I don’t think it answers my question directly. In my theoretical case, both parties have consented to one party recording the conversation. Is explicit consent of the first party required for the second party to also make a recording?