AI and Robotics IBA GEI April 2017
AI and Robotics IBA GEI April 2017
Artificial Intelligence
and Robotics and Their
Impact on the Workplace
April 2017
Prepared by:
Gerlind Wisskirchen
Blandine Thibault Biacabe
Ulrich Bormann
Annemarie Muntz
Gunda Niehaus
Guillermo Jimnez Soler
Beatrice von Brauchitsch
Foreword
The IBA Global Employment Institute (GEI) was formed in early 2010 for the purpose of
developing a global and strategic approach to the main legal issues regarding human
resources for multinationals and worldwide institutions. In addition to regularly updating
existing reports, the advisory board publishes new reports concerning current legal issues
every year.
This year, the advisory board presents its first report on Artificial Intelligence and Robotics
and Their Impact on the Workplace. The Working Group, coordinated by GEI Vice-Chair
for Multinationals Gerlind Wisskirchen, focuses on future trends concerning the impact
of intelligent systems on the labour market (Parts A and B) and some corresponding legal
problems (Parts C to J).
Artificial intelligence (AI) will have a fundamental impact on the global labour market in
the next few years. Therefore, the authors discuss legal, economic and business issues,
such as changes in the future labour market and in company structures, impact on
working time, remuneration and on the working environment, new forms of employment
and the impact on labour relations.
Will intelligent algorithms and production robots lead to mass unemployment? By way of
some examples, the authors show how AI will change the world of work fundamentally.
In addition to companies, employees, lawyers and society, educational systems and
legislators are also facing the task of meeting the new challenges that result from
constantly advancing technology.
Please note that it is not the intention or purpose of the IBA Global Employment
Institutes report to describe the law on any particular topic; its aim is to illustrate certain
changes and trends on the future labour market. References to a particular law are
neither intended to be a description or summary of that law nor should they be relied
upon as a statement of the law or treated as legal advice. Before taking any action,
readers should obtain appropriate legal advice.
III. The second machine age or the internet of things the fourth industrial revolution 11
A) DATA SCIENTIST 27
B) CROWDWORKER 28
aa) Advantages 28
bb) Disadvantages 29
A) HIGH-ROUTINE OCCUPATIONS 31
3. Jobs in demand 33
B) TEACHING PROFESSIONS 33
VIII. Labour relations: possible implications for union activities and collective
bargaining aspects 41
1. Industry 4.0 from the union viewpoint the human at the centre 41
1. In-house organisation 48
6. Outsourcing of jobs 52
A) NO INDEPENDENT DECISION 56
B) NO KILLING ROBOTS 56
III. Employees need for vigilance new risks due to new technology 62
IV. Employers need for vigilance new risks for products due to new technology 63
V. Need for health and safety regulations to keep up with technological progress 64
V. Social implications 72
4. On-call work 76
5. Job sharing 76
7. Home office/telework 77
8. Desk sharing 79
11. Conclusion 80
II. Change in the philosophy of the company: using big data in economic devices 99
III. Change in the philosophy of the company: using big data in personal devices 100
I. Use of Social Media, Private Email Accounts and the Internet 110
J. Bring Your Own Devices and Other Wearables in the Company 114
I. Opportunities 114
1. Risks 116
2. Opportunities 116
When we transfer the experience of the past to the future, disturbing questions arise:
what will the future world of work look like and how long will it take to get there?
Will the future world of work be a world where humans spend less time earning their
livelihood? Alternatively, are mass unemployment, mass poverty and social distortions
also a possible scenario for the new world, a world where robots, intelligent systems
and algorithms play an increasingly central role?1 What is the future role of a legal
framework that is mainly based on a 20th century industry setting? What is already
clear and certain is that new technical developments will have a fundamental impact
on the global labour market within the next few years, not just on industrial jobs but
on the core of human tasks in the service sector that are considered untouchable.
Economic structures, working relationships, job profiles and well-established
working time and remuneration models will undergo major changes.
The name behind the idea of AI is John McCarthy, who began research on the
subject in 1955 and assumed that each aspect of learning and other domains of
intelligence can be described so precisely that they can be simulated by a machine.2
Artificial intelligence describes the work processes of machines that would require
intelligence if performed by humans. The term artificial intelligence thus means
investigating intelligent problem-solving behaviour and creating intelligent
computer systems.3
Deep learning
This is machine learning based on a set of algorithms that attempt
to model high-level abstractions in data. Unlike human workers, the
machines are connected the whole time. If one machine makes a mistake,
all autonomous systems will keep this in mind and will avoid the same
mistake the next time. Over the long run, intelligent machines will win
against every human expert.
Robotisation
Since the 19th century, production robots have been replacing employees
because of the advancement in technology. They work more precisely than
humans and cost less. Creative solutions like 3D printers and the self-
learning ability of these production robots will replace human workers.
Dematerialisation
Thanks to automatic data recording and data processing, traditional back-
office activities are no longer in demand. Autonomous software will
collect necessary information and send it to the employee who needs it.
Gig economy
A rise in self-employment is typical for the new generation of employees.
The gig economy is usually understood to include chiefly two forms of work:
crowdworking and work on-demand via apps organised networking
platforms.6 There are more and more independent contractors for
individual tasks that companies advertise on online platforms (eg, Amazon
Mechanical Turk). Traditional employment relationships are becoming less
common. Many workers are performing different jobs for different clients.
Autonomous driving
Vehicles have the power for self-governance using sensors and navigating
without human input. Taxi and truck drivers will become obsolete. The same
applies to stock managers and postal carriers if the delivery is distributed by
delivery drones in the future.
AI will lead to a redefinition and a disruption of service models and products. While
the technical development leads primarily to an efficiency enhancement in the
production sectors, new creative and disruptive service models will revolutionise
the service sector. These are adapted with the support of big data analyses at the
individual requirements of the client and not at the needs of a company.
6 See: www.ilo.org/wcmsp5/groups/public/---ed_protect/---protrav/---travail/documents/publication/wcms_443267.
pdf p1 (last accessed on 26 September 2016).
7 See: www.lmis.de/im-wandel-der-zeit-von-industrie-1-0-bis-4-0 (last accessed on 11 February 2016).
INDUSTRY 4.0
The term Industry 4.0 means in essence the technical integration of cyber physical
systems (CPS) into production and logistics and the use of the internet of things
(connection between everyday objects)10 and services in (industrial) processes
including the consequences for a new creation of value, business models as
well as downstream services and work organisation.11 CPS refers to the network
connections between humans, machines, products, objects and ICT (information
and communication technology) systems.12 Within the next five years, it is
expected that over 50 billion connected machines will exist throughout the world.
The introduction of AI in the service sector distinguishes the fourth industrial
revolution from the third.
Well-known examples from the field of robotics and AI are the so-called smart
factories, driverless cars, delivery drones or 3D printers, which, based on an
individual template, can produce highly complex things without changes in the
production process or human action in any form being necessary.
Well-known service models are, for example, networking platforms like Facebook
or Amazon Mechanical Turk, the economy-on-demand providers Uber and Airbnb,
or sharing services, such as car sharing, Spotify and Netflix. Studies show that
merely due to sharing services the turnover of the sector will grow twentyfold
within the next ten years.
14 Sandro Panagl, Digitalisierung der Wirtschaft - Bedeutung Chancen und Herausforderungen (2015) Austrian
Economic Chambers 5.
15 See: www.bloomberg.com/news/videos/2016-05-20/forward-thinking-march-of-the-machines (last accessed on
2 November 2016).
16 Brzeski and Burk, Die Roboter kommen, Folgen der Automatisierung fr den deutschen Arbeitsmarkt (2015) ING
DiBa 1.
17 See: www.bcgperspectives.com/content/articles/lean-manufacturing-innovation-robots-redefine-competitiveness/
(last accessed on 3 August 2016).
18 Krischke and Schmidt, Kollege Roboter (2015) 38/2015 Focus Magazin 66.
19 See: www.faz.net/aktuell/wirtschaft/fuehrung-und-digitalisierung-mein-chef-der-roboter-14165244.html (last
accessed on 8 April 2016).
20 Haag, Kollaboratives Arbeiten mit Robotern Visionen und realistische Perspektive in Botthof and Hartmann
(eds), Zukunft der Arbeit in Industrie 4.0 (2015) 63.
21 Maschke and Werner, Arbeiten 4.0 Diskurs und Praxis in Betriebsvereinbarungen (October 2015) Hans Bckler
Stiftung, Report No 14, 9.
Robots and intelligent machines can have not only supporting, but even life-
saving functions. Examples are robots used in medical diagnostics, which have
high accuracy, or for the assessment of dangerous objects using remote control
and integrated camera systems. These make it possible, for example, to defuse a
bomb without a human having to come close to it. The Robo Gas Inspector,23
an inspection robot equipped with remote gas sensing technology, can inspect
technical facilities even in hard-to-reach areas without putting humans at risk, for
example, to detect leaks in above-ground and underground gas pipelines.
What is relevant for each country in this respect is the degree of its technological
development and the technological skills of young people who will shape the
future of the labour market. Young people in developing countries are optimistic
with regard to their professional future. They have more confidence in their
own ability than many young people in developed countries. Many developing
countries, however, face the problem that only those employees who have already
gained substantial IT knowledge show an interest in and a willingness to improve
their technological skills.26 A great advantage in a number of developing countries
is that more women are having access to education. In the UAE, for example,
Low-labour-cost countries, such as China, India and Bangladesh, are still benefiting
from their surplus of low-skilled workers, while Western companies are still
outsourcing their production to these countries. If, however, these companies
decide to produce in their countries of origin in the future, using production
robots and only a few workers, the surplus of low-skilled workers might turn into
a curse for these developing countries.28 A good example of this problem is the
clothing industry, in which clothing is still often produced by hand in low-labour-
cost countries such as Bangladesh or Thailand, although the work could easily be
done by machines because much of it is routine. The question is how to integrate
the great number of unskilled production workers into a structurally difficult labour
market that depends on foreign investment.
27 International Organization of Employers, Brief on Understanding the Future of Work (6 July 2016) 18.
28 UBS, Extreme automation and connectivity: The global, regional, and investment implications of the Fourth
Industrial Revolution (January 2016) 24 ff.
29 Automat trifft Armut (15 July 2016) 135 Handelsblatt News am Abend 6.
30 Jeder zehnte Arbeitsplatz durch Roboter gefhrdet (19 May 2016) 115 Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung 20.
31 See n29 above.
32 See: www.bcgperspectives.com/content/articles/lean-manufacturing-innovation-robots-redefine-competitiveness
(last accessed on 3 August 2016).
33 Ibid (last accessed on 3 August 2016).
34 See: www.spiegel.de/wirtschaft/soziales/arbeitsmarkt-der-zukunft-die-jobfresser-kommen-a-1105032.html (last
accessed on 3 August 2016).
For a long time, the BRIC countries (Brazil, Russia, India and China) were
considered the beacon of hope for the global economy. Owing to an
increased mining of raw materials and the outsourcing of numerous
Western branches of industry to low-labour-cost countries, investors expect
long-term yields. However, demand for raw materials is currently very
low, so Brazil and Russia are becoming less attractive. With the technical
development of production robots, many companies producing in low-
labour-cost countries will relocate their production sector to the countries
where they originally came from.36
The developing countries in Central and South America will also not profit
from the trend of the fourth industrial revolution. It is to be feared that
these countries like the North African countries and Indonesia are not
equipped to face automation and digitalisation due to the lack of education
of much of the population, lack of investment in a (digital) infrastructure
and lack of legal framework.37
Further complicating the matter is the rising birth rate in the North African
and Arabic countries, which will lead to high rates of youth unemployment.
For every older employee in Uganda, Mali or Nigeria, seven younger
employees will enter the badly structured national labour market.38 In these
countries, only 40 per cent of the younger generation is in employment,
and most of these jobs are low-paid jobs without social security in the third
sector.39 It does not come as a surprise that many youths especially those
who are better educated would like to leave their countries to migrate
to Western developed countries. Legal frameworks, less corruption, more
social security and a better infrastructure would be necessary to avoid the
35 See: www.alumniportal-deutschland.org/nachhaltigkeit/wirtschaft/artikel/wachstumsmotor-digitalisierung-
industrie-4-0-ikt.html (last accessed on 17 February 2016).
36 See: www.bcgperspectives.com/content/articles/lean-manufacturing-innovation-robots-redefine-competitiveness
(last accessed on 3 August 2016).
37 UBS, Extreme automation and connectivity: The global, regional, and investment implications of the Fourth
Industrial Revolution (January 2016) 24 ff.
38 Die groe Migrationswelle kommt noch (8 August 2016) 183 Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung 18.
39 Ibid.
The winners of the digital revolution are, on the other hand, likely to be
the highly developed Asian countries with good education systems, such
as Singapore, Hong Kong, Taiwan and South Korea.41 These countries
together with the Scandinavian countries have been undertaking research
and working to find digital solutions for complex issues for a long time. The
digital interconnection of people in these countries is also very far advanced.
The share of the population at risk of unemployment is about six per cent in
these countries.42
Another positive trend can be seen for India and China, which are both
considered very suitable candidates for participation in the digital revolution
due to most of the population having a good command of English and IT skills.
IT knowledge is taught in schools as a key qualification. It is, therefore,
not surprising that Indian and Chinese professionals have more extensive
computer knowledge than their French or English colleagues do.43 Not
only are salaries and wages lower in India, but also the number of better-
qualified professionals is why, according to Forrester Research, 25,000 IT
jobs are likely to be outsourced to India from the UK alone.44 Like China,
India is in the process of developing from simply being a low-labour-cost
country into being a Western-orientated society whose population works
mainly in the tertiary sector. As the most populated countries in the world,
these two countries have a high level of consumer demand. Moreover,
because of their rapidly growing cities, these developing countries
need highly developed solutions in terms of logistics and environmental
technologies, like the smart city, in order to increase the quality of life for
city residents over the long term.
The lower the demand for workers, the higher will be the companies demand for
highly qualified employees. According to common belief, better education helps.50
Creative people who are talented in mathematics and sciences are best qualified
for the new labour market. Although not every future employee will be required to
be an IT programmer, should have a fundamental grasp of analytical and technical
matters. Employees should be able to form a unit with supporting machines and
algorithms and to navigate the internet comfortably and move safely in social
networks. To do this, it is necessary to know how the basic structures work.
The employee should also, however, be able to examine machines and software
critically. There is an increasing demand for employees who can work in strategic
and complex areas as well. It is not necessary only to oversee machines, but
also to coordinate them. The interfaces between humans and machines and the
overlaps in the area of responsibility among the more flexible humans must also be
coordinated. There is thus likewise an increasing demand for future executive staff
with social and interdisciplinary competence.52 Employees must be able not only to
communicate with other people, but also, if necessary, to lead them effectively and
coordinate with them.
51 Krischke and Schmidt, Kollege Roboter (12 September 2015) 38/2015 Focus Magazin 66.
52 Bochum, Gewerkschaftliche Positionen in Bezug auf Industrie 4.0 in Botthof/Hartmann (eds), Zukunft der
Arbeit in Industrie 4.0, 36.
53 See: http://reports.weforum.org/future-of-jobs-2016/shearable-infographics (last accessed on 11 February 2016).
54 See n12 above, 14.
55 See: www.zukunftsinstitut.de/artikel/die-neuerfindung-der-arbeitswelt (last accessed on 15 February 2016).
56 Anderson, The Future of Work? The Robot Takeover is Already Here (2015) 27.
In their investments, companies will focus more and more on sensor technology
and IT services of any type in the years to come. In addition to newer electrical
equipment of any type, these so-called equipment investments also include new
production machines and their repair, installation and maintenance.58 In the area
of processing and extractive industries, these investments are of vital importance
because in the long run, costs for material and personnel can be reduced only
with the aid of these investments. Without this cost reduction, these companies
will no longer be able to compete.
Apart from this, building investments are vital. In addition to the classic extension
and conversion of a companys own production facility and workplace, this primarily
concerns fast internet across the board, without which efficient communication is
not possible either among humans or between human and machine. In the course
of digitalisation, companies will change their focus and invest more in other areas.
Seventy-one per cent of the CEOs of the worlds biggest companies are sure that
the next three years will be more important for the strategic orientation of their
companies than the last 50 years.59 Therefore, investments in technical devices and
the focused use of AI are necessary in all branches.
Many companies already use intelligent systems. Industry 4.0 will add
still more systems, and it often turns out to be difficult in practice to
connect these to the already established systems.60 Normally, the systems
do not stem from the same developer and they usually cover different
Many employees and trade unions are hostile towards intelligent IT systems,
although AI is a phenomenon without which certain industries and services
would be unthinkable. Many people, for instance, have got used to small robotic
vacuum cleaners. In principle, there is no structural difference between this
household aid and intelligent production system. Moreover, only 11 per cent
of US employees assume that they will lose their jobs because of intelligent
IT systems or production robots.68 The biggest fear is of a plant closure as a
consequence of mismanagement.
Employers must proceed sensitively and gradually when introducing new systems.
They should establish clear rules for handling the machines and specify relevant
hierarchies, for example, that the machine has only an assistive and not a replacing
function, and the power to make decisions still lies with the human being as
before and not vice-versa. Employees should be involved in the development and
the process of change at an early stage in order to grow accustomed to the new
technology themselves.70
69 Albers, Breuer, Fleschner and Gottschling, Mein Freund, der Roboter (2015) 41/2015 Focus 78 ff.
70 IG Metall Robotik-Fachtagung, Die neuen Roboter kommen der Mensch bleibt (2015).
71 See: www.faz.net/aktuell/wirtschaft/weltwirtschaftsforum/weltwirtschaftsforum-in-davos-das-ist-die-groesste-
herausforderung-der-digitalisierung-14031777.html (last accessed on 25 January 2016).
72 Hadeler and Dross, ME Gesamtmetall EU-Informationen (13 November 2015) 32/2015 RS 2.
73 See n21 above, 18.
74 See: www.computerwoche.de/a/die-elf-wichtigsten-soft-skills,1902818 (last accessed on 22 February 2016).
For example, industrial cognitive science and automation bionics are suggested
as innovative degree courses that deal mainly with researching and optimising
the interaction between robot systems and employees.75 In addition to the area
of robotics, extended degree courses in the area of big data will be necessary.
Employers demand for data artists and data scientists or big data developers is
rapidly increasing. The main subjects for the professional field of data science
include researching data of all types and their structures. Uniform education in
this area is, however, still not available.76 Governments are responsible not only
for making education possible, but also for focusing young peoples interests on
technical and IT jobs at an early age. This will increase the number of graduates in
the long run.77
Ultimately, neither the tried and tested nor the new degree courses may focus
solely on imparting specific technical knowledge. The employees of the future
must, for instance, be given an understanding of the possibilities of technical
aids. This applies, however, not only to theoretical background, but also to
practical applications and thus handling the technical aids. US investors do not
expect the new generation of employees to be technical geniuses, but employees
should always be willing to learn new skills.78 A lifelong learning progress
characterises the new labour market, which is changing rapidly because of
technical development. The challenge for schools and universities is to teach the
employees soft skills that are becoming more important than ever, such as the
ability to work in a team and to accept criticism, assertiveness, reliability, social
and communicative skills and good time management. Learning soft skills will
prepare employees optimally for the future labour market: To Switch the Skills,
Switch the Schools.79
About 47 per cent of total US employment is at risk, read the catch line in the
report by Frey/Osborne in 2013.80 Consistent with this is that according to a survey
by Pew Research Center, 65 percent of US citizens expect that within 50 years a
robot or an intelligent algorithm will be doing their work.81 Experts hold vastly
different opinions with regard to the dramatic impact of the changes in the job
structures. Others claim that, thanks to digitalisation and automatisation, many
employees whose jobs are at high risk will not be replaced completely, even if the
technical advances would allow a replacement.82
Not every specific occupation will be replaced by the work of machines in general,
but it is certain that some individual occupational activities will be performed by
machines. For example, the risk of being replaced by a robot is 87 per cent for a
barkeeper.83 Already today, it is technically feasible that a robotic machine could
mix drinks, send the clients orders directly to the kitchen, receive complaints
and accept the clients money. Nevertheless, the atmosphere in the bar or in the
restaurants will no longer be the same. Because of the lack of acceptance by
potential clients and the high acquisition costs, it is definite that 87 per cent of all
barkeepers will not lose their jobs in the next few years.
Small and medium-sized companies, in particular, are likely to shy away from
technical devices because of the high acquisition costs and the lack of highly
qualified specialists who can handle the new systems.84 In view of the occupational
work structure and the legal, technical, ethnical and social barriers, only nine to
12 per cent of total US and German employment will be at high risk of being
completely replaced.85 Nonetheless, we can be confident that the performance of
several occupational activities by machines will ultimately cost some jobs. Other
studies expect that AI and robotics are not just job killers; the eliminated jobs
will be compensated for, more or less, by newly created jobs.86 For example, the
German government assumes that digitalisation and automatisation will create
about 390,000 new jobs in the third sector over the next ten years in Germany.87
80 Frey and Osborne, The Future of Employment: How Susceptible Are Jobs to Computerization (2013) 1.
81 See: www.pewinternet.org/2016/03/10/public-predictions-for-the-future-of-workforce-automation, 3 (last accessed
on 30 March 2016).
82 Bonin, Gregory and Zierahn, bertragung der Studie von Frey/Osborne auf Deutschland (2015) 18.
83 See n16 above, 6.
84 See n82 above, 21.
85 Ibid, at 14.
86 See: www.rolandberger.com/publications/publication_pdf/roland_berger_amcham_business_barometer_2.pdf, 15
(last accessed on 22 September 2016).
87 See: www.buendnis-fuer-industrie.de/unsere-themen/digitalisierung (last accessed on 26 April 2016).
However, we have to recognise that no one does a job that is completely safe.89
However, the potential digitalisation of their jobs is likely to be reduced for
employees with a PhD or a masters degree (only 18 per cent in total).90
A) DATA SCIENTIST
The data scientist role has been in existence only for a few years
and will gain importance in the future. On the basis of statistical
calculations using probability theories, this new occupational group
will draw up forecasts. Comprehensive IT knowledge is vital for this
complex task. This includes the relevant programming languages and
writing complex programming codes. In addition, a data scientist
must be familiar with the business processes of the company in order
to be able to create reasonable links. Therefore, basic knowledge
of business administration, economics, stochastics and marketing
is vital. In addition to this comprehensive knowledge, interpersonal
qualities are also required. A data scientist must be able to adapt
their services to the expectations of customers or the employer and
to communicate.
aa) Advantages
93 Reiter, Das Internet steckt voller Jobs fr Designer und Programmierer, die schnell und billig arbeiten. Wie
verndert das die Arbeitswelt? (2014) 47 DIE ZEIT.
94 See: n6 above, 2.
95 See n5 above.
96 See: www.avvo.com (last accessed on 3 March 2016); Deutscher Anwalt Verein, Anwaltsblatt (March 2016) 3
225 ff.
bb) Disadvantages
97 Uffmann, Mglichkeiten und Grenzen erfolgsabhngiger Vergtung (2016) 39 Industrie 4.0 als Herausforderung
des Arbeitsrechts ZAAR Schriftenreihe 39.
98 See: www.faz.net/aktuell/feuilleton/debatten/die-digital-debatte/politik-in-der-digitalen-welt/online-arbeit-auf-
abruf-wer-schuetzt-die-clickworker-12852614.html (last accessed on 4 March 2016).
99 Kocher and Hensel, Herausforderungen des Arbeitsrechts durch digitale Plattformen ein neuer
Koordinationsmodus von Erwerbsarbeit (2016) NZA 984 ff.
100 The On-Demand Economy and the Impact on Employment Law (September 2016) International Bar Association
Employment & Industrial Relations Law 31.
101 See: www.faz.net/aktuell/feuilleton/debatten/die-digital-debatte/politik-in-der-digitalen-welt/online-arbeit-auf-
abruf-wer-schuetzt-die-clickworker-12852614.html (last accessed on 4 March 2016).
102 See n72 above.
2. Jobs to be eliminated
A) HIGH-ROUTINE OCCUPATIONS
103 Benner, Die Digitalisierung lsst uns wenig Zeit (25 April 2016) 96 Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung 20.
104 See: www.portal21.de/PORTAL21/Navigation/Laender/Spanien/Dienstleistungen/pflichtversicherung.html#1337158
(last accessed on 26 August 2016).
105 Goos, Konings and Rademakers, Future of Work in the Digital Age: Evidence from OECD countries (19 February
2016) 11 ff.
106 Jaimovich and Siu, The Trend Is the Cycle: Job Polarization and Jobless Recoveries (2012) 8 ff.
107 See n5 above.
3. Jobs in demand
B) TEACHING PROFESSIONS
The sector teaching professions covers not only the areas of school,
university and vocational training, but in particular, possibilities of
Nevertheless, this profession is not safe from Industry 4.0 either, and
further technical development is necessary. An intelligent algorithm
went through the European Court of Human Rights decisions and
found patterns in the text. Having learned from these cases, the
algorithm was able to predict the outcome of other cases with 79
per cent accuracy.123 In addition to common online databases and
automatic time recording, the acceleration of work with regard
to reviewing contracts is a central topic. For example, reviewing
contracts or entering contracts in a database is often a nuisance for
lawyers and leads to high costs for the client. In order to reduce the
lawyers work and save money for clients, software developers and
lawyers are working on intelligent systems for reviewing contracts,
called optical character recognition (OCR).124 Such software allows
patent, contract and other lawyers to perform a preliminary review
of legal documents. The system can present the overall structure
on the basis of language analyses without a lawyer having read the
document. The software is also able to automatically create a graphic
presentation of the data gained by it.125
Algorithms not only make the work easier for lawyers, but also
allow them to offer fixed prices. It is therefore logical that according
to a study conducted by Deloitte, 100,000 jobs in the English legal
sector will be automated in the next 20 years.131 Moreover, it can be
observed that more and more companies are working with on fees.
Private clients also want to have a better overview of the lawyers
fees, so more and more law firms are forced to offer fixed prices and
to invest in digital innovations because of the pressure from their
clients and increased competition.132
Like lawyers, doctors and nursing staff are far from being replaced.
However, in this sector too, technical possibilities can lead to staff
reduction.133 In some cases, machines are able to work faster,
more accurately, and more efficiently than the best humans. It will
no longer be possible to imagine hospitals without robots in the
future. Their tasks will be, for example, to move people out of their
Moreover, the gap between rich and poor will continue to grow, which
will inevitably lead to social unrest that will be a danger for the growth of
the economy.135 As a result, wage differences will become more obvious
than ever, despite established minimum wages in many countries, such as
the US, Germany, France or the UK. Owing to increasing digitalisation and
the streamlining of jobs that this entails, there will be fewer possibilities
for well-paid work in the low- and medium-wage sectors.136 Many people
will end up unemployed, whereas highly qualified, creative and ambitious
professionals will increase their wealth. When one compares the distribution
of wealth in the OECD countries in the years from 1985 to 2013, one sees
that this trend has already begun.137
134 Ibid.
135 See: www.heise.de/newsticker/meldung/Weltwirtschaftsforum-Mehr-Gestaltungswillen-fuer-Digitalisierung-und-4-
industrielle-Revolution-3079851.html (last accessed on 12 February 2016).
136 Automation and Independent Work in a Digital Economy (May 2016) OECD Policy Brief on the Future of Work 4.
137 See n56 above, 7ff.
The fourth industrial revolution does not involve only fundamental technical and
economic changes; the role of humans within the world of work is also subject
to constant change. All over the world, employee organisations have realised
that new challenges are in store for employees from all professional and social
classes because of robotics and the computerisation of the workplace. In the
future, strategic thinking and permanent flexibility will increasingly be expected
of employees. Employee representatives are unlikely to stand idly by in view of
the upcoming innovations; they can be expected to demand there be a balance
between the elimination of old jobs and the creation of new jobs.
Unions can be expected to pay particular attention that no lost generation is left
behind, and that change takes place gradually with sufficient options for further
training, advanced training and retraining.156 This will be difficult because of the
fact that employees have to work longer before receiving their pensions. Instead of
dismissing existing employees and hiring new employees for the more creative jobs,
the employee representatives might exert their influence in order to work towards
specific retraining courses being made available.157 This applies particularly with
regard to older employees who are often of vital importance for most companies
due to their many years of professional experience and who must adapt to the latest
technical conditions in order to benefit equally from these technical innovations.
Unions and employee representatives will not be able to save every job. Rather
than firing especially older employees, partial retirement rules might be an
opportunity.158 In addition, the unions will have to bid adieu to their classic clientele
of industrial workers and look for new member groups in the service sector and
among better-qualified employees.159 In many countries (especially in Southern
Europe or Northern Africa), the unemployment rate among young adults is very
high. Due to the lack of alternatives, many young employees are working in less
well paid crowdworking mini jobs outside social security systems, which could lead
to poverty risks.160 Unions are likely to focus on this generation, and fight for fair
working conditions and consultation rights for independent contractors as well.
1. Industry 4.0 from the union viewpoint the human at the centre
161 Dzida, Wearables am Arbeitsplatz Wie tragbare Computersysteme Einzug in die Betriebe erhalten (2016)
ArbRB 146.
162 See n103 above.
163 See n70 above.
164 See: www.verdi.de/++file++540ef2c46f68445a5b000080/download/Brosch%C3%BCre_Digitalisierung-und-
Dienstleistungen.pdf, 17 (last accessed on 23 March 2016).
165 Dr Constanze Kurz, Industrie 4.0 verndert die Arbeitswelt in Gegenblende Das gewerkschaftliche
Debattenmagazin (2013).
Under the old German laws, trade unions and works councils represent
only (permanent) employees, and only (permanent) employees are forced
to pay social security tax/contributions. These regulations reflect common
practice in the 1970s.179 As a consequence of this, German lawmakers will
consider as many workers as possible to be employees in order to guarantee
minimum social standards and will not be willing to accept a model of
independent contractors.180 The above-mentioned Spanish law and the
Italian law (discussed later) are going in a different direction. The lawmakers
are introducing new forms of atypical work, are creating tax systems and
The increased use of virtual platforms, social media and other IT tools
offers new opportunities for employees to communicate collectively. These
tools are free. Why would an employee pay for union membership if
they can communicate with other employees for free and if the pressure
exerted on the employers by media sometimes helps the employees to
solve their problems? It is said this will unavoidably lead to less union
activism.184 It is to be expected that unions will want to represent or
to protect new forms of workers, too regardless of their form of
employment. If so, they will have to use more social media, for example,
and have to fight for the social interests of younger generations in order
to address them. That will be a key way to justify the unions exceptional
position in the labour world of the future.
187 Ibid.
188 See: http://sethgodin.typepad.com/seths_blog/2015/03/labor-unions-in-a-post-industrial-age.html (last accessed
on 11 May 2016).
189 See: www.martinlennartz.de/braucht-die-neue-arbeitswelt-gewerkschaften (last accessed on 11 May 2016).
190 See: https://innovation-gute-arbeit.verdi.de/++file++540998f5ba949b358400004e/download/138.1411_digit_
arbeit_RZ3_web.pdf, S.24 (last accessed on 23 March 2016).
The established companies, in particular, will have to think about whether they
are able to satisfy the new requirements of the market. More than 40 per cent of
the CEOs of companies operating worldwide assume that there will be significant
changes in their companies in the next three years.192 One company or another will
like the aluminium industry in the US have to redefine its focus of operations
because of the lack of demand for their products. This also includes the creation of
new business structures.
1. In-house organisation
But it is not only the departments that will have to be better connected.
Companies will have to focus on their core competencies and will outsource
other work in a cost-effective manner.194 That includes production and
services. A professional connection between companies and their external
providers not only within the company will be a basis for success in the
digital world. Especially in big companies, the number of different levels
has to be reduced; smaller organisational charts are necessary.195 Every
unit between the working group and the person who makes the final
Not only the in-house organisation, but also the single working place will
be the target of numerous changes. Cloud computing allows access to
internal data from everywhere, while digitalisation enhances the use of
automatic data processing and makes it easier to make quick decisions.199
The cross-linking of single employees by new technologies allows easier
communication and enables a better exchange of information. Therefore,
the relevant facts necessary to make decisions and the results of big data
analyses are collected by the right contact person. This leads to more
autonomy of the individual employee. This form of dematerialisation saves a
lot of time that employees could use for other tasks.
196 Schller, Wandel gestalten statt verwalten (2 April 2016) HR Performance Businesspartner fr
Personalverantwortliche 26.
197 Giersberg, Die Revolution rollt (25 April 2016) 96 Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung 17.
198 See n196 above, 27.
199 See: www.uni-regensburg.de/rechtswissenschaft/buergerliches-recht/arbeitsrecht/medien/4._pr__sentation_
landestagung_pollert.pdf (last accessed on 29 September 2016).
200 Ibid.
4. Matrix structures
The increasing globalisation and digitalisation of society and the huge range
of services offered by independent contractors on the internet render it
easier for companies to relocate fields of activity or service sectors to other
regions (outsourcing). In addition to production facilities, call centres or
warehouses are situated in low-labour cost countries or weaker economic
areas. Awarding contracts for software and programming services to foreign
freelancers is also a typical example of growing outsourcing practice in
the digital sector. In the US, for example, there are about 1.5 million jobs
that have disappeared in the production sector because of the cheaper
production possibilities in China.212 Another form of outsourcing or a
special virtual working group is joint ventures. Globalisation results in
stronger operational and strategic cooperation between two competitors,
even if that leads to the disclosure of their core competences.213
However, it is not only the bigger companies that are responsible for
outsourcing jobs. Employees will ask for more autonomy and will be focused
on many different career paths sometimes in very different branches
or countries rather than having a 9-to-5 job.214 The global trend is that
Work 4.0 will take place outside traditional employment structures with a
rise in self-employment.215 Highly qualified young employees, in particular,
like their independence and will focus their work on the development of
creative solutions for a changing client base. The digital worker of tomorrow
will no longer want to work in hierarchically structured companies and
to do the same work every day. They will be less dependent on only one
employer.216 The previously described range of all kinds of independent
services will lead to another problem: what legal system is applicable in
cross-border cases? Private international law has some solutions, such as
that the applicable jurisdiction is the place where the service is provided or
where the employers permanent address or the workers residence is.217
International courts of arbitration are a good way to avoid problems such as
that of jurisdiction or the long duration of legal proceedings.
These risks are not shared in this way in the work-on-demand culture. The
independent workers generally become responsible for their own social
security in the future.219 For example, such an external service provider who
is too ill to work does not have to be paid, but simply does not receive any
newer orders. The entrepreneurial risk has thus shifted in the direction of
the freelancer. However, the award of contracts to independent contractors
is a legitimate expression of a modern economy, which has certain
advantages for both parties.220
Whereas autonomous systems are still far away in some sectors, assistive robots
and partially autonomous systems are already state-of-the-art technology in
many industrial production plants. The pioneer in respect of robot density in the
industrial sector is South Korea. In South Korea, there are 437 robots for every
10,000 employees in the processing industry, while Japan (323) and Germany
(282) rank second and third.221
218 New technology and new forms of atypical work: crowdsourcing and the challenges and risks for
multinationals (September 2016) 26(2) International Bar Association Employment & Industrial Relations Law 28.
219 See n27 above, 3.
220 Greiner, Werkvertrag und Arbeitnehmerberlassung Abgrenzungsfragen und aktuelle Rechtspolitik (2013)
NZA 697, 703.
221 See: www.vdma.org/article/-/articleview/8453283 (last accessed on 15 February 2016).
222 See n20 above, 61.
In the Henn-na Hotel in Sasebo, Japan, actroids are used. Actroids are
humanoid robots, that is, robots with a human likeness. In addition to
receiving and serving the guests, they are also responsible for cleaning the
rooms, carrying the luggage and, since 2016, preparing the food. The robots
are able to respond to the needs of the guests in three languages. So far,
the use of actroids is a culminating point in the interaction between human
and robot. Over the long term, the plan is to replace up to 90 per cent of the
employees by using robots in hotel operations. As evidenced by numerous
CCTV cameras, the humans only remaining task is to intervene if problems
arise or to stem safety risks.223
In the near future, humans and robots will work together in the production
sector. Only with the help of assistive robots can production be fully optimised.224
As can be concluded from the hotel pilot project in Japan, robots are
already able to assume assistive functions and to work together with
humans. This will be particularly important in the nursing care sector.
Whereas many people refuse to be nursed by a robot for ethical
reasons, it is assumed in practice that it wont be possible to imagine
hospitals without nursing robots in the future. Their tasks are, for
example, to move people out of their wheelchairs or beds or to help
blind people find their way.
227 Brkircher and Armborst, Digitalisierung, Industrie und Arbeit 4.0 Herausforderungen fr Unternehmen,
Beschftigte und Betriebspartner (2016) 4 Personalpraxis und Recht 86.
228 Tyson, Technology and the workplace: artificial intelligence and robots in the 21st century workplace (April 2016)
26(1) Employment & Industrial Relations Law 27.
229 Krcher, Alternative Wege in die Industrie 4.0 Mglichkeiten und Grenzen in Botthof and Hartmann (eds),
Zukunft der Arbeit in Industrie 4.0 (2015) 56.
230 See n168 above, 46.
A) NO INDEPENDENT DECISION
The state of development to date is, however, that humans still have
the full power to make decisions and that only assistive functions
are assigned to robots, at least in the processing industry. The
question is whether the decision-making power of robots would
be advantageous. Unlike many human beings, an autonomous
system does not make its decisions on the basis of instinct, but
on the basis of purely objective criteria. A robot announces the
decision free of emotion, so there will be fewer misunderstandings
in communication. Still, leaving the power to make decisions
with humans has the decisive advantage of promoting the social
acceptance of the systems in the establishment. What is relevant,
however, is the content of the decision.
B) NO KILLING ROBOTS
245 Bodungen and Hoffmann, Belgien und Schweden schlagen vor: Das Fahrsystem soll Fahrer werden! (2015) NZV 521 ff.
246 See: www.nhtsa.gov/cars/rules/import/FMVSS (last accessed on 14 March 2016).
247 Lutz, Tang and Lienkamp, Die rechtliche Situation von teleoperierten und autonomen Fahrzeugen (2013) NZV 57 ff.
248 See: www.zeit.de/mobilitaet/2016-07/bundesregierung-alexander-dobrindt-autonomes-fahren-gesetz (last
accessed on 28 September 2016).
249 http://easa.europa.eu/system/files/dfu/CS-25_Amdt%203_19.09.07_Consolidated%20version.pdf (last accessed
on 26 February 2016).
250 See n247 above.
As is the case with big data analyses, the huge data volume brings
the risk of creating a transparent driver or a transparent employee if
the motor vehicle is used for business purposes. Movement, conduct
and personality profiles of the driver or of the front-seat passenger of
a fully automated system can be derived from these data.
The machinery may not be put into operation until a safety briefing relating to the
individual workplace of the employee working with the machinery has taken place.
It is also recommended to regulate the use of the systems by establishing policies.
If technical difficulties with the system occur, these discrepancies must also be
included by the manufacturer of the machinery in its risk assessment.
Not only production faults, but also software faults can come into
consideration as potential safety hazards relating to autonomous systems
and assistant robots. Moreover, unforeseen risks can be expected to appear
at any time. A distinction should be made between the risks for the actual
end product and the risks for the humans working with the robot. It will be
necessary to train employees in both cases. They will have to become one with
the new system. Humans must have confidence in the system, but should not
blindly depend on it.
III. Employees need for vigilance new risks due to new technology
Since most accidents at work are caused by a lack of coordination between the
human operator and the assistive system259 or human error (improper operation),
it is essential to meet (inter)national safety standards. Many European companies
use the EU standards as minimum requirements, and these are also used in other
countries that do not have any such codified safety standards. Effective protection
of occupational health and safety is characterised by regular risk assessments and
the training of first aiders, evacuation assistants and regular employee instruction.
In addition, whether the rules are followed must be checked regularly by plant
officers or the supervisor. Furthermore, depending on the sector, preventive
examinations and the avoidance of certain hazardous substances for dangerous
jobs and consultations with experts are advisable. This should be summarised in
policies, the content of which must be adapted to the individual circumstances
of the local site and must be checked by the relevant officers. Otherwise, high
penalties for companies that violate safety regulations could be the consequence.
It is advisable to be guided by best practice, which goes beyond the wording of the
relevant statutes (if any), in order to be able to prove if needed that the company
has dealt with the safety concerns. It is important to respond to the individual risks.
Whether the risk originates from intelligent machines, the working environment,
other people or hazardous substances is irrelevant. The main cause for all accidents
at work is human negligence. For this reason, the subject of safety at work must
be brought home to each employee over and over again.
IV. Employers need for vigilance new risks for products due to
new technology
Many employee representatives at the establishment level hold the view that,
due to digitalisation, many dangerous tasks previously performed by employees
can be transferred to robots. For this reason, they welcome digitalisation as regards
safety at work, but will try to ensure that not all employees are replaced by robots.
The human worker must remain central to work. Robots have to be adapted to
human needs and not the other way around.261 It must be recognised at the same
time that many employee representatives at the establishment level have numerous
consultation and information rights as regards occupational safety and thus also
with regard to the use of autonomous systems.
A rest break during working hours if the working day exceeds six hours.
Special rules for night work; for example, the normal hours of work
for night workers may not exceed an average of eight hours in any
24-hour period.
Special rules are also set out in the Directive for the working hours of
employees in certain sectors. These are, for example, doctors in training,
offshore work, workers onboard fishing vessels or workers concerned
with the carriage of passengers on regular urban transport services.263
2. Rest breaks
3. Rest periods
One day of rest per week or four free days in four weeks.
Special remuneration must be paid for night work from 22:00 to 05:00.
6. Annual leave
The Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA) provides, in general, for a 40-hour
working week, but it can be extended.
2. Leave
The breakdown of boundaries for working time means that both employers and
employees have leeway to organise working hours. A complete breakdown of
boundaries in terms of time would remove the obligation to keep traditional
working hours.267
The employer, who may freely specify the content, place and time of the employees
performance of work, generally has the right to decide on the scheduling of working
hours as long as the terms of employment are not specified elsewhere, for example,
in an employment contract or a collective bargaining agreement.
If both the volume and the scheduling of the working hours are specified
elsewhere, the employer may not demand that the employee must be available
outside the stipulated hours or perform work on call. On the other hand, the
employee may not reorganise their working hours flexibly if an explicit agreement
is in place. The employer would have to allow this or would have to have tolerated
it over a longer period of time.
If, however, there is no rule and the employer does not exercise its right to decide,
the employee will be free to manage the scheduling of working hours, particularly if
variable working time models are applied. To benefit from the advantages of Work
4.0, employees and employers might either not conclude specific agreements on
the scheduling of working hours, or expressly agree on the flexible management of
working hours.268 With regard to the flexible management of working hours within
Industry 4.0, the US FLSA is considered to be especially flexible and might possibly
serve as a model in other regions. The employees there do not have to pay attention
to rest periods and maximum daily working hours, but at the same time are
Working life has to date been characterised worldwide by rigid standard working
hours: employees were present in the establishment or in the office and worked
there for a certain number of hours. The working day ended when the employees
left the establishment after eight or ten hours of work. In the Work 4.0 era,
employees take their work home with them in the form of smartphones, laptops,
tablets and email. Critics claim that this makes it impossible to disconnect from
work, which damages employees health and psyche over the long term.270
Additionally, self-determined working time can lead to higher motivation,
increased health and more productivity with regard to the individual employee.271
Even though there are some employees who prefer fixed and clear working times
without the obligation or possibility to take work home, the majority of employees
hope for more flexibility concerning their individual working time and would use
flexible working time models. In some cases, slightly postponing the daily start
of work could facilitate the employees whole day, for example if they can take
another train, can adapt their start of work to the opening hours of the daycare
facility for children or can participate in a morning sport activity or an advanced
training programme.
A possibility to prevent these negative results may be the six-hour day in Sweden.
Innovative employers report that the shorter workdays improve the productivity
of employees.272 New vistas are opened: thanks to digital innovations, families,
especially, are able to adapt work and leisure time more flexibly to their own
needs, which is said to lead to a better work-life balance. Supporters say this will
cause employees to be more satisfied and motivated and will reduce stress and
illness.273 However, employers can set core times to ensure that personal meetings
can take place with all employees. Furthermore, women who are currently not
working would profit from flexible working hours and working places, which could
particularly enable them to work part-time from home. Such options would help to
bring them back into the workforce.274
From now on, some parents would be able to spend more time with their
children if, for example, they leave the office at noon and work from home in
the evenings when their children have gone to bed. Especially for women, this
269 Nlke and Stumpp, Arbeiten 4.0-Potenziale ausschpfen (2016) 3 Personalpraxis und Recht 57 f.
270 Bauschke, Arbeitsrecht 4.0 Eine kurze Bestandsaufnahme aus aktuellem Anlass (2016) AT 225.
271 German Federal Ministry of Labour and Social Affairs, Weibuch Arbeiten 4.0 119.
272 See n151 above, 1.
273 Ohne Grenzen Arbeiten in Vigo gesundes Unternehmen (2016) 2/16 5.
274 See: www.accenture.com/us-en/gender-equality-research-2016 (last accessed on 22 September 2016).
The breakdown of the boundaries for working hours also makes it possible
to implement working life models that benefit the work-life balance. It is not
easy to create this balance in the rush hour of life.278 Owing to the rise in
the number of university graduates, the average age of employees beginning
their working lives is increasing. They then also often want to start a family
simultaneously within a short space of time.279 Working life is the space of
time from entry into the world of work until retirement. These models make it
possible for employees to focus more on their private lives during certain phases
of their lives in accordance with their individual needs.280 This can be achieved
by implementing long-term working time accounts on which overtime can be
collected over a longer period of time. By doing this, working hours can be
reduced without loss of income. The so-called age-reduced working time model
makes it possible to collect overtime in order to go into retirement earlier or to
take a sabbatical in addition to taking normal leave.281
The additional working hours can also be compensated for by money. This
money can then make it possible to take a (temporary) sabbatical at a later
time or to finance going into retirement at an earlier date.282 These models are
not risk-free. Companies can become insolvent, and under several national
laws, social security is not guaranteed if the employee takes time off for longer
without payment.283 Depending on the country, social security systems will have
to be adapted.
The regulating and further development of working time has had great
significance already in the course of Work 3.0. Work 3.0 is characterised by a
comprehensive industrialisation. The breakdown of the boundaries for working
time began when BlackBerry phones and remote access made it possible to
work on the road or from home. That led to the always-on work culture and to
constant availability. At first, only executive employees and freelancers, who are
not covered by working time regulations in most countries, had to be constantly
available as a rule, but this gradually came to be the case for more employees
without management responsibility. Digitalisation makes this possible. Regarding
the question as to whether the employer or clients demand permanent reachability,
20 per cent of the questioned employees said they did. The highest demand for
permanent reachability exists in the service sector, where the contract relationship
is characterised by a relationship of trust (eg, lawyers, nursing care, management
consultants and veterinarians).284 To counteract this trend, the French government
has enacted a law, which will come into force in 2017, that gives employees the
right to disconnect after finishing work (le droit la dconnexion).285
The progressive digitalisation and the increasing significance of the internet for
the labour markets now play an important role in Work 4.0. This also includes,
however, the situation that internet customers expect comprehensive service and
have ever more individual desires for products after closing time, at weekends or on
national holidays. Owing to the possibility of constant availability, customers expect
sellers or service providers to be available outside normal office hours.286
Nonetheless, Work 4.0 is geared more to the interests of the employees than
Work 3.0 was. The reason for this is that highly qualified staff can be winners,
since research, development, design, planning and organisation jobs are now in
demand, whereas purely productive occupations are on the decline. Companies
must lure these prospective employees (the so-called Generation Y), unlike
20 or 30 years ago, not only by offering money, but also by offering attractive
arrangements for a better work-life balance.287 The breakdown of boundaries for
working time can be used positively by all employers. Such working time models
can be adapted to fit personal needs much better than the previous standardised
working time models.288
The future world of work will require employees to be much more flexible. Ties to
fixed places of work or to fixed working hours will be increasingly broken.
The new challenge is to reconcile the positive effect of flexibility on companies and
staff with good employment conditions, despite the breakdown of boundaries.
The traditional 9-to-5 working day is becoming less common because of working
time and working place flexibility; Work 4.0 is no longer a place to go but a task
to perform.294 There are various new forms of work. However, the question will
be: how do companies meet the demand for flexibility while navigating often
restrictive and old regulations?295 The salient developments under Work 4.0 in
terms of working time are:
This is in line with the current Directive of the European Parliament and the
European Council concerning certain aspects of the organisation of working
time, which does not specify maximum daily working hours, but chooses
a minimum rest period of 11 hours within a 24-hour period. Nevertheless,
European employees on average work 41.4 hours during a week even if
a 35- to 40-hour week is provided by law in the individual countries.297
There are a lot of employees and employers who voluntarily or not use
the maximum weekly working time of 48 hours. This should achieve the
goal that both employees and employers have more leeway to establish
innovative working-time models.
However, due to the focus on average hours, the maximum weekly working
hours can be exceeded over a longer period. Rules could be established
at the establishment level for such a case. Is it permissible to exceed the
limits? If so, how are the hours compensated for? Could this be by transfer
to a working time account or by remuneration? Should regular monitoring
between employer and employee be carried out in order to respond to
surplus working hours?
Traditional extra work, for which special rules are required, must be
considered separately, however. Such extra work also includes night work,
which is remunerated in most countries by allowances exceeding normal
wages. If the trend is towards ever more flexible working time, the form of
rigid night work commencing at a specific time of day will probably become
The increasing use of mobile devices will make explicit statutory regulations
for the definition of working time and rest periods necessary. The regular
use of such devices will make compliance with the rest periods required in
some countries almost impossible.298 How does one reconcile the goal of
working time regulations to set a minimum rest period when interruption by
a mobile device seems inevitable? Is every short response to an email to be
considered an illegal interruption to the rest period? Is it possible to narrow
the definition of rest period to reflect the reality of Work 4.0? Legislators
could, for example, take smartphones out of the rest period, by arguing
an answer to an email, SMS or WhatsApp message cannot jeopardise
relaxation so greatly that the rest period must afterwards be restarted.
Besides, rest periods cannot be controlled by the state just as the state
cannot know the number of hours worked at home.
5. Job sharing
308 Bauer and Heimann, Flexibel, motivierend und all-inclusive Rechtssichere Vergtung von Fhrungskrften
(2014) NZA-Beilage 114 ff.
309 See n296 above, 336 ff.
310 See n269 above, 57.
311 See n179 above, 3.
312 See n273 above, 5.
7. Home office/telework
One of the main advantages of home or mobile office work is that, for
example, the time that is otherwise spent travelling to and from work can
be used to work or for personal purposes. This contributes to the work-
life balance.317 That applies especially to employees living in structurally
weak regions. In some cases, these employees have to leave their place
of residence for better professional opportunities. Another advantage is
that, especially in urban centres, costs for office space can be saved and
employees can solve complex issues without interruption. The decoupling
of working hours from traditional office hours also leads to more flexible
customer service, and the workers appreciate this family-friendly working
model. Moreover, this provides more employment opportunities for people
with disabilities or for those who have to provide care for relatives. In the
Netherlands, each employee has a statutory right, based on Industry 4.0,
to the establishment of a home office since 1 July 2015.318 To reject the
request, the employer has to prove that operational reasons do not permit
working from a home office.
On the other hand, not every job or every part of a job can be done at
home. A home office makes no sense if the worker has a job without
having their own responsibilities, or has no access to the necessary
documents or tools. The same applies to jobs in the retail sector or the
handcraft sector where the daily presence of the required workers is
absolutely necessary and the core element of their individual work. Even
if retail salespeople are a part of the service sector, their job cannot be
performed from home in contrast to so many other jobs in this sector. A
general right to perform work from home can lead to frustration for these
employees and has to be rejected. Developing flexible solutions that do
not exceed the boundaries of what is possible with regard to costs, the
employers organisation structures and technical possibilities is the challenge
the working contract parties have to face.
8. Desk sharing
The so-called hot desking or desk sharing model will be the workplace of
the future for many employees. Because every worker will no longer be at
the workplace during fixed office hours owing to flexible working hours
it will be possible to save on workspace by providing one workplace for
more than one worker. A worker will reserve their workplace in advance via
IT systems (desk sharing booking systems). There will then be special offices
for confidential talks with colleagues or customers.320
These two forms of atypical work are commonly used in central European
countries in order to obtain special knowledge in a short time. Interim
management describes the activity of highly skilled experts who are hired
temporarily for special tasks (eg, the representation of a company until a
new director is found) or projects.321 Employee sharing is an activity where
an employee is jointly hired by a number of employers to work for a number
of organisations, but in a permanent full-time capacity.322 These forms of
staffing services are good for companies if they have a personnel shortage
because of illnesses or during peak periods. Alternatively, if the company
has an individual non-recurring project and has no staff of its own with
certain special knowledge, using external freelancers is a way to avoid
having to engage a permanent employee.
The significantly higher short-term costs for an external expert are, in the
long run, less expensive than the salary costs for permanent employees,
especially if the company has no permanent need for the specialist. There
are at least certain advantages for both parties: greater efficiency and lower
costs for the employers and more variety in the freelancers work and higher
payment for the duration of the project.323 However, there are some legal
risks concerning the contractual design. Interim management and shared
This form of flexible work is intended for families. Both parents can reduce
their working time to share their family responsibilities (eg, education
of children or to care for close family members). In order to encourage
mothers to stay in an employment relationship, experts are thinking about
a claim against employers to reduce the working time of family members
temporarily and certain wage-replacement benefits for employees paid by
the government. The wage replacement can be based on the Austrian part-
time work model for the purpose of offering employees individual training
opportunities.324 Nevertheless, these part-time agreements should be limited
because if the employee reduces their working time once, the employer
cannot be forced to accept an employees return to their old working time.
Therefore, in some European countries, lawmakers are thinking about
an extended right to come back for part-time workers regardless of the
reason why they have reduced their working time.325
11. Conclusion
In conclusion, it can be said that the how of work will change radically
and quickly in the course of Industry 4.0.326 Different types of part-time
opportunities will become more and more popular not only for female
employees. In the software sector, in sales and for technicians with different
areas of work, there is already a very strong focus on flexibility in terms
of time. This trend to combine working life with private life is not only
strengthened by constant availability and increasing globalisation, with
tasks across different time zones, but reflects a generation of workers who
increasingly focus on personal interests and not only on remuneration or
career options. In order to create more jobs, on the one hand, and at the
same time relieve existing employees of further-reaching duties on the other,
it would seem sensible to give thought to alternative working time models.
For example, Google is considering introducing a four-day week with a
flexible 30-hour working week.327 Alternatively, Sweden is introducing a 30-
hour week with a maximum six-hour day. The salary will be the same as for
a 40-hour week. It is said this will lead to less illness and more productivity
of the employees, but the cost for employers will rise.328
On the other hand, US law offers better possibilities for new business
models and allows flexible working time as well. The announced revision of
the EU Working Time Directive330 will probably deal with the need for more
flexibility. This revision is supposed to reconcile the interests of employers
(eg, certain possibilities for control) and the interests of employees/workers
(eg, more flexibility, social security and comprehensible wording). Finally,
flexibility clauses in employment contracts and flexible working time are part
of the self-determination of employees.331
The creation of a flexible framework for working time is not always in the
interests of the employees and the unions, as could be seen in France.332
Employees and unions went on strike against the implementation of a new
labour law during 2016. It could be said that, where a rigid 35-hour week
applies, the need for reform was greatest in order not to miss the switchover
to Industry 4.0. The now implemented labour law, applicable as of 2017,
accepts the 35-hour week standard in general, but allows a 46-hour week for
12 weeks as an exception if this is agreed on in a works agreement.333
Even if unions and other employee representatives demand policies and other
collective agreements regarding digital working,334 they ignore the fact that
even collective regulations set by a union and not only laws can patronise
the individual employee. Individual working time regulations between a
single employee and an employer cannot be negotiated if the employer is
bound by certain limits imposed by a collective agreement. This can lead to
the same frustration level for an individual employee. Finally, everyone talks
about better working conditions that are adapted to the employees personal
needs. But what difference does it make to an employee if a restrictive law or
The question thus arises whether the individual remuneration structure should
not be based on how productive the employee actually is. The incentive of
performance-related remuneration is to increase the employees productivity. The
motto is to work more effectively rather than just being present in the office. It is
possible in the era of Work 4.0 to work at any time and at any place. This requires
An employee who, such as in France, has a 35-hour work week, from 0900 to
1700 with a one-hour lunch break, is not paid extra if they have a telephone call
lasting one hour with their US line manager at 2100 to inform them about the
current status of the project. If they have an employment contract stipulating a
hitherto customary time wage system, and the employment contract provides
that a certain amount of overtime is compensated for by their fixed salary, they do
not receive any additional remuneration for that telephone call. If, on the other
hand, flexible working hours, performance-related remuneration or project-related
remuneration was agreed, the employee is remunerated appropriately for the
telephone call with their line manager. The last alternative gives the employee the
feeling that they receive remuneration for their constant availability and willingness
to work, which will usually motivate them to process a few emails occasionally
on the weekend or to complete the draft that they had already begun later on in
the evening. It is also to be expected that having been given such freedom, the
employee will deal with broader topics.
Moreover, German law, like the comparable Californian Fair Pay Act applicable
as of January 2016, makes it more difficult for employers to establish fair and
legally compliant pay policies regarding the employees performance.347 Even
if the employer is able to demonstrate that the different wage is caused by
factors other than sex (eg, education, experience, business necessity, longer
length of employment or a shortage of skilled workers), an unequal payment
may initially have the appearance of discrimination. The employer may be
called upon to convince a court that this is not in fact discrimination. The
biggest obstacle under German law is the obligation for bigger companies
to have their payment policies approved by the Federal Anti-Discrimination
Agency. This costs time and money. In general, such laws are the exact
opposite of what the new labour market needs, even if gender equality is an
important topic for society. Instead of these laws, lawmakers should trust the
digital change. More and more rating of employers through online portals
and by the media is generating pressure and thereby leading to a rethink in
employers philosophy concerning unequal payment.
In the future, the parties to employment contracts will agree more and more on
performance-related remuneration.348 This can be seen as a win-win situation.
An employee who works a lot and effectively will receive more pay, whereas an
employee who is less productive will cost less for the company. An employee
who prefers to have more time for themselves can benefit from this, whereas
the company saves money. In theory, this will lead to a fairer distribution of
wages within a company among top performers and low performers. In this
case, the performance-related remuneration will depend on the change of the
working time.349
The belief that an employee who works the most hours does the most for
the company will recede. This situation can lead to a psychological burden for
employees, especially if the performance-related remuneration makes up a large
share of the total remuneration. Ultimately, both sides will nonetheless profit from
pay based on performance in comparison with pay based on presence.
Paying the originator a percentage of the licence fees if the rights are
sold to a third party.
Piece wages will become rarer because industrial robots will be used more
and more in production. The same applies to extra work allowances. Owing
to the outsourcing of ever more services to external providers, there will also
be more lump sum payments for the provision of a specific service package.
This becomes manifest in the IT sector or in connection with ghostwriters,
for example.
The company can set targets within the framework of its authority to issue
instructions to employees. Alternatively, individual target agreements can be
concluded during appraisal interviews or set out in employment contracts.354
Depending on the type of target agreement, subsequent modifications to the
targets are also possible, within certain limits.
The central issue for performance-related remuneration structures is not the type
of agreement but how performance-related is defined. For all alternatives, it is
advisable to specify exactly what the linking factor for flexible remuneration is
supposed to be: the achievement of an individual result or the achievement of a
collective result. The achievement of certain soft targets (eg, improving customer
satisfaction) or the achievement of certain hard key performance indicators (eg,
the achievement of turnover thresholds) can be used as the basis, for example.355
With regard to the latter in particular, a distinction has to be made between the
individual turnover achieved by a single employee, the turnover achieved by a
department, the turnover achieved by the company and the turnover achieved by
the group. A link to all parameters is possible.356 With regard to the latter linking
factors, however, the question that arises in major companies is whether this
In many sectors, company pension options are common. These supplement the often
poor retirement security provided by state systems and are part of the remuneration. It
becomes complicated if the employee frequently changes jobs, because this creates a
confusing patchwork made up of different retirement planning models.360 According
to a 2016 survey by Deloitte, members of Generation Y will change jobs frequently.361
Variety with regard to the places where they work and jobs, time-outs and more
flexibility are more important to younger people than loyalty to their employer. In the
European region, non-transparent retirement arrangements are thus being established
in the individual EU Member States. The Netherlands and the UK, for example, have
introduced tax-privileged pension accounts and are guided by the system used in
the US. There, 401k accounts, to which employers can transfer pension amounts for
Therefore, their view is that working time checks are necessary to protect
employees.366 In the European region, this basic assumption is underpinned by
collective bargaining agreements in which employees are categorised in wage
groups and are paid equally within these wage groups. Flexible remuneration
structures are reserved for executive staff, who are usually not covered by collective
bargaining agreements.
As a result of Work 4.0, however, criteria with regard to the place of work that
previously characterised independent contractors also apply to employees.370
Examples include:
Digital inclusion: Distance working also integrates social groups in the labour
market that are not available for traditional employment relationships.
The border between professional life and private life become blurred: The
traditional places of work and fixed working hours are dissolving, which
results in new organisational possibilities, but also new burdens for
employees.
If the place of work, in addition to working time, becomes more flexible, and if
employees are granted more powers for working independently, it becomes harder
to distinguish between an employee and an external freelance worker or a worker
provided by a third-party company.372 It is difficult to make a distinction between
independent contractors and some part-time workers, particularly marginal
part-time workers.373 Whereas part-time workers have full employment rights in
some countries (eg, protection against unfair dismissal, representation by a works
council, paid leave, full unemployment benefits and maternity leave), independent
contractors generally do not benefit from such social security, even if their weekly
working hours are more than the marginal part-time workers working hours. In
some cases, independent contractors support a company in numerous projects
over a long period, but these workers are not always classified as employees.
Some students who work on the basis of a marginal part-time (mini job) contract
work mainly during their university vacation periods. Casual work, on the other
hand, takes the form of work on demand for a varying income and varying
working hours during the year.374 Nevertheless, these students, with their limited
contracts, are classified as employees. External workers are usually like employees
integrated into the companys operations.
Not only are the dividing lines between employees and independent contractors
in the sector of digital work disappearing: the same applies to the differentiation
between employers and clients as well. It is becoming more common that it is not
just the employees employer (as identified in the written contract of employment)
who issues orders. A typical example is matrix structures for groups of companies,
where it is not necessarily the employer who tells an employee what to do. Going
further, the group of companies that include the employer is not always the
borderline. In some cases, there are also clients or franchise-givers that have the
power to define the individual employees working conditions.380 Corporate social
responsibility is such that a case where small companies to which certain legislation
(eg, CRS-Directive 2014/95/EU or the UK Modern Slavery Act from 2015)381 does not
apply have to fulfil their clients obligations as well.382
These two forms of Work 4.0 are good for saving full-time jobs for small and
medium-sized companies that can then respond immediately to a changing order
situation and can pool their know-how. On the other hand, there are risks for the
employer. For example, there is the risk that the individual employee who works for,
say, two companies might transfer knowledge acquired from one company to the
other during the performance of their work to the detriment of the first company.
383 Ibid.
384 Ibid.
385 See n143 above, 7.
386 See n103 above.
387 See n153 above, 62, 63.
The basic assumption is that under liability law, a natural or legal person is always
responsible. As long as no e-person (electronic person) exists, the robots actions
and declarations will be attributed to the employer or the producer.392 With regard
to the increased use of assistive robots in the industrial sector and the increased
use of algorithms in the service sector, the question arises as to who is liable in
each individual case if the linking factor for such liability is the autonomous IT
system or an autonomous production robot: the employee who operated the
system incorrectly, the producer if the system contains errors of any kind, or the
employer who made the system available?
With regard to the external liability of employers towards their clients, the
question arises whether an employee who operated an autonomous system
incorrectly is liable. In principle, the causer of the damage, thus any party, can
be liable. In most cases, the client will recover any damages from its supplier,
With regard to liability for autonomous systems, the current fault-based liability
system is generally not perfect because the injured party bears the burden of
proof. Some legal scholars argue for a liability system without fault for every
robotic action because the employer enjoys certain benefits from the use of
robots.395 Employers can take out insurance for every robotic action to cover their
financial risks and can have recourse from the producer.
With regard to the liability of the employee, however, it must be noted that their
share of the liability is generally in legal systems attributed to the employing
company, since the employee was acting, after all, during the performance
of their professional duties. This (graduated) release from liability is common,
for example, in Brazil396 and most European countries, because passing on the
liability amount which, in some cases, is many times greater than the monthly
salary of the employee, who is already working for the employer would be
unfair.397 At the same time, the employees liability is limited in most cases if
they did not cause the damage intentionally. In the situation where an employee
is not working at an employing company but operated a machine incorrectly,
there is a case to say that this should not to be assessed differently. In principle,
it is possible to hold such an employee liable, in which case the damage is again
attributed to the employing company.
393 Ibid.
394 See: www.autonomik.de/documents/AN_Band_2_Recht_bf_130325.pdf 12 (last accessed on 2 March 2016).
395 See n392 above.
396 See: www.baymevbm.de/Redaktion-(importiert-aus-CS)/04_Downloads/Downloads_2011/1_Recht/1.2_
Internationales-Recht/Schriftenreihe/SR_Brasilien_IS.pdf, 54 (last accessed on 4 March 2016).
397 Ibid, 86ff.
Machines can store ever-larger volumes of anonymised and unstructured data from
a variety of sources, generated by humans and machines. The volume of stored
data has been increasing almost exponentially since the invention of the internet.
According to estimates, the worldwide data volume is expected to be more than
100 zettabytes (100,000,000,000,000,000,000,000 (or one sextillion bytes) in 2020,
ten times the volume in 2006.398 This huge volume of data is called big data.
The industry expects many new insights, for example, with regard to marketing,
customers and staff, from the evaluation and analysis of big data, as well as a boost
in productivity and at the same time a reduction of labour costs. Additionally, big
data and the internet of things create new disruptive purposes of AI.399
Stored data can be acquired from different sources. For example, it is collected
during surfing on the internet, during the use of social media and cloud computing,
when contracts are concluded with authorities and private individuals, or during
electronic payment transactions. Even sensitive data, such as information on health
from health insurance or credit card data, is collected. In addition, economic and
social statistics are included to complete data sets. They do not contain personal
information, however. The data is anonymised and exists in an unstructured form
so that in most countries, big data analysis does not violate applicable law.
The focus is not on storage, however, but on the analysis of collected data. To
date, fewer than half of companies exploit the potential of big data analysis,400
although big data analysis makes it possible to demonstrate correlations between
the daily behaviour and the personality of customers. For the large digital leaders,
the collected data is very important for seeing the new trends and creating
new business models and optimising their own products based on these trends
(the elephant effect).401 They depend on the data, after all.
Examples of this are the Amazon Echo and Google Home boxes, which detect
the consumers voice to obtain relevant information on the consumers individual
398 Bitkom, Big Data im Praxiseinsatz Szenarien, Beispiele, Effekte (2012) 12.
399 See n10 above.
400 Priddat and West, Digitale Wirtschaft. Mit besonderem Blick auf die chemische Industrie (2015) BARC-Studie
Hot Spot 6, 11.
401 See: http://bundestag.at/2015/wp-content/uploads/2015/09/kollmann-digital-leadership.pdf (last accessed on
28 September 2016).
On the other hand, Fintech startups are creating services that are redefining
customers expectations without data (the piranha effect).404 Purely technical
processes can also be optimised by means of big data analyses. By linking and
evaluating digital information, machines will be able to predict, analyse and
even remedy software and hardware defects, which will help improve risk
management. Internal data shows where internal communication or production
is in need of improvement and where procedures can be enhanced.405 This
makes it possible to optimise internal processes, which, in the long term,
will result in increased profitability as a consequence of the companys cost
reduction. Another great advantage of big data analysis is that it creates a clear
basis for decisions.406 On the basis of a comprehensive analysis, it is possible
to prepare the hard facts on a topic optimally, enabling the decision-maker to
make purely rational decisions without spending a lot of time on research. An
example of the effective and cost-saving use of big data is the news section on
Facebook.407 Instead of 15 employees writing about things they are interested
in, an intelligent algorithm chooses the trending topics based on the users
preferences by means of big data analytics. The former editors jobs are
eliminated, and IT specialists update the algorithm and make sure that no topics
like lunch are published on Facebook.408
Big data has thus become an important part of all corporate development in all
sectors and will be more important than ever in future, as shown by the rapid rise
in the amount of collected data.
Big data analysis is more than just an instrument to control the performance and
conduct of employees. It is also possible to forecast employee behaviour on the
basis of big data analysis. Not only data concerning individual employees, but
Furthermore, an analysis of the data relating to employees who have left the
company makes it possible to conclude what situation in life or employment
typically leads to an employees resignation. This facilitates a forecast of future
staffing needs. In addition, the reasons for above average staff turnover in certain
areas can be ascertained.411 Individual appraisals and master data can be linked
to information concerning the performance of departments, personnel flows and
remuneration structures. Analysis facilitates conclusions regarding the conditions
under which high potential employees are able to develop their abilities best. On
this basis, it is possible to optimise organisation structures, training programmes
and incentive systems, among other things. In order to adapt these operational
needs, more flexible international laws will be necessary.
ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE AND ROBOTICS AND THEIR IMPACT ON THE WORKPLACE 101
V. Using big data for recruiting new employees
ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE AND ROBOTICS AND THEIR IMPACT ON THE WORKPLACE 103
processing is necessary for the performance of a contract to which the data
subject is party or in order to take steps at the request of the data subject
prior to entering into a contract. In the future, it will thus be easier to use big
data within the company without a subsequent declaration of consent from
each employee having to be obtained or without partially invalid declarations
of consent being included in the employment contract.
In addition, it will be easier for users to access their data in the future. They
may demand information from companies that collect data as to what data
relating to them is stored, and they may have data changed and transferred
to other providers. Besides this right to be provided with information, EU
lawmakers have strengthened the users right to be forgotten to the effect
that data put online can be effectively deleted. Another aspect of consumer
protection is the duty of the companies to use understandable terms and
conditions to the effect that the individual user knows for what purpose
and to what extent their data is used.421 As before, however, there is still the
option, which most services have already made use of in their general terms
and conditions, of obtaining the consent of the data subject. In the future,
however, such consent is supposed to be valid only if the user is at least 16
years old, which will probably lead to numerous users registering under a
false name or with a false date of birth.
3. Safe harbour
There are still alternative ways for companies to transfer data to the US;
these include approval by the national data protection supervisory
authorities of binding corporate rules (BCRs) within an internationally
operating company or the standard contractual clauses specified by the
EU Commission. Numerous data protection authorities have currently
suspended the approval of BCRs. In addition, declarations of consent
by the data subjects or works agreements, if only employee data are
relevant, are also suitable. These alternatives, however, still involve a
great risk for companies. Approvals may be refused, works agreements
may not come about, binding corporate rules must be approved by
the national data protection authorities and are hard to change, while
courts can reject declarations of consent as inadmissible.
ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE AND ROBOTICS AND THEIR IMPACT ON THE WORKPLACE 105
4. EU-US Privacy Shield
The new regulation now provides that the use and storage of personal data
is authorised only as long as the use and storage serves the purpose of
processing (principle of dedicated use of personal data).427 If an employee
is no longer part of the company, collecting and saving personal data is
no longer allowed. In contrast to the Safe Harbour treaty, compliance with
these rules is intensively controlled by US authorities, and violations are
punished. Moreover, the data subjects are entitled to be given information
by US companies, and there will be an objective and independent
ombudsperson at the US State Department whom affected EU citizens
can contact. The mass surveillance of EU citizens by US authorities is to
be prevented, with the exception of the usual special cases (fight against
terrorism, national safety, etc). Both parties are supposed to jointly review
annually whether the EU-US Privacy Shield functions correctly.428
For companies, data is not only an asset worth protecting, but is merchandise.
Data is, for example, designated the oil of the future now.431 The demand for
personal data is increasing, particularly from startup companies. As a rule, they
are very interested in obtaining the data of potential customers in order to draw
their attention to new products. The same applies to major companies, which send
customers personalised advertising on the basis of their buying behaviour.
Furthermore, there are many companies whose sole business activity is collecting
data and reselling them to other companies. The best examples of this are
Facebook and Google. The deal is: service in return for data. Huge computing
centres that analyse and redistribute masses of data are being established,
particularly in the US. This requires an intelligent system that automatically creates
links, sorts the data and provides the relevant employee with the data required for
their work in edited form. This is a central challenge for the big data developers
and big data scientists.
Employers wish to ensure that data is distributed within the company only to
the relevant employees and is not lost during transfer. It is vital for industry
that its data is protected from access by third parties, from governmental
supervisory authorities (unless required by law) and from its own employees.432
It is just such protection from ever-present supervision that constitutes a
central challenge for companies computer scientists and data technicians.
The affected companies whose field of business depends on the use of data,
especially, will have to make massive investments in a closed system. Currently,
about 70 per cent of global companies CEOs are concerned about the
protection of business secrets against cyber-attacks.433
A special obligation applies in this regard, not only to third-party data obtained
by means of big data analyses, but in particular to employee data. In this context,
employers are obligated in many countries to protect the data relating to their
employees from unauthorised access. It goes without saying that an IT security
system is required that, if possible, should already correspond to future state-of-
the-art technology. Other ways of securing the data include a restrictive access
system and an adequate encryption of the data and the entire system. The IT
sector faces the challenge of having to design and update a system with ingenious
network and component security (eg, by way of a firewall or external access logs)
on a regular basis. In addition, there is often a need to ensure that certain data
ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE AND ROBOTICS AND THEIR IMPACT ON THE WORKPLACE 107
is permanently deleted. This applies particularly to the disposal of old computers,
because old hard disks can usually be recovered.434
A popular case concerning the use of proprietary software is the Juniper example.
When third-party software is used, there is always a risk that a third party might
read along or log in as needed. Unlike with open source programmes, companies
are usually unable to view the source code of their software partners. In the
case concerning Juniper power supply units, a backdoor was hidden in its
programming codes that allowed the US National Security Agency (NSA) access to
millions of users data.435
In this regard, it is not, as so often feared, data leaks or hacker attacks that
pose the greatest risks, but the negligence of the companies own employees.
Typical cases are leaving forgotten papers on the copy machine in the office,
reading confidential documents on public transportation or clicking on dubious
links when using the office computer. Employees awareness regarding the
confidential handling of personal data entrusted to them has to be raised. This
requires training courses, qualified data protection officers and compliance
guidelines that show the employees the importance of data protection and the
consequences of violations.436
434 Handelsblatt Research Institute, Datenschutz und Big Data Ein Leitfaden fr Unternehmen (2015) 7 f.
435 See: www.heise.de/security/meldung/Schnueffelcode-in-Juniper-Netzgeraeten-Weitere-Erkenntnisse-und-
Spekulationen-3051260.html (last accessed on 22 January 2016).
436 See n27 above, 9.
437 See: www.zdnet.de/88142549/china-fuhrt-datenschutzregeln-fur-unternehmen-ein (last accessed on 22 January 2016).
ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE AND ROBOTICS AND THEIR IMPACT ON THE WORKPLACE 109
I. Use of Social Media, Private Email Accounts
and the Internet
Owing to the progressing digitalisation and interconnection of employees, social
media is an important factor within the company. Social media involves a change
in internet culture to the effect that the user participates more actively in creating
the programme content of the provider portal and uses the portal for private and
business purposes.
Not only are numerous transactions concluded via the internet, but also numerous
contacts and even employment contracts are made this way. In order to ride
this wave, not only must the company be present on the internet, but also the
individual employee, as the relevant contact in the company. Networking on sites
such as LinkedIn, XING, Twitter or Facebook has become more important than
ever.439 Like companies, many private persons have their own blogs or disseminate
podcasts. In this regard, corporate interests and the private interests of the
employee are often mixed, which results in an ambivalent situation for companies.
On the one hand, social media can be ideally used for marketing and recruiting
purposes. Thanks to the personal connection of the individual person, one learns
more about potential business partners and colleagues and can foster contacts in
an easier and more time-saving way due to the distance of the web and a certain
anonymity. Social media is just as ideal for the exchange of information and
for the dissemination of positive messages; so many companies even want their
employees to deal with websites in individual cases, even exclusively. In the
areas of distribution, marketing and research and development, social networks
are indispensable.
On the other hand, dealing with social media also involves risks. The internet never
forgets, so negative statements or internal information that was not agreed on can
only be retracted with difficulty. Further, the personal misconduct of an employee
reflects on the company. Data security can also be a major problem, because
employees use social media not only at work, but also privately, and sometimes do
not effectively protect themselves against online attacks.440
Another problem is the loss of working time. If social media is permitted at work
even if enabled only for business purposes it is hard to draw the line between
Routine checks, without any reason, of statements (both private and professional)
made by employee on social media platforms, are likely to be impermissible.442
If, however, there are like in the US hardly any specific statutory data protection
regulations, but only the guidelines companies impose on themselves, there is
hardly any protection for employees from monitoring by their own employer.443 In
such a country, control and the ensuing sanctions imposed by the employer will be
generally permissible.
ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE AND ROBOTICS AND THEIR IMPACT ON THE WORKPLACE 111
cent of employers in the Benelux countries deny their employees such use.445
This is different as far as the online and social media presence of the company is
concerned. In this area, companies in the US are clearly more active than European
companies. Of the 500 major US companies, 97 per cent have a LinkedIn account
that is regularly updated. Moreover, the trend can be recognised that companies
are blogging a little less, but the number of their fans is growing.446 The number of
private users of social media is also higher than in Europe.
Generally speaking, employers have little influence on the private use of social
media profiles outside of working hours. Use cannot be prohibited in general, but
can be restricted in some countries if there is a reference to work, the employees
position and if the employment relationship can be specifically impaired by the
expected usage.448
ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE AND ROBOTICS AND THEIR IMPACT ON THE WORKPLACE 113
J. Bring Your Own Devices and Other
Wearables in the Company
Technical innovations (eg, smart glasses, smart gloves or GPS-supported
wearable computer systems) 450 lead to new possibilities concerning the
performance of work, such as flexible working time and flexible working places.
Therefore, the use of mobile devices anywhere and anytime is necessary. Cloud
computing is the solution for this. Cloud computing is a model for enabling
ubiquitous, convenient, on-demand network access to a shared pool of
configurable computing resources (eg, networks, servers, storage, applications and
services) that can be rapidly provisioned and released with minimal management
effort or service provider interaction.451 With that technology, the use of the
employees mobile devices for operational purposes or the performance of home
office work is relatively simple.
I. Opportunities
The advantages for employers and employees are obvious. In general, employers
must have their employees work with materials that are suitable for professional
use. In the digital age, laptops, smartphones and tablets are necessary to ensure
that employees are constantly available. The employer has to pay for these
mobile devices. Employees who are highly qualified with respect to technology,
in particular, prefer to use their own devices and their preferred software instead
of the companies software and hardware. These devices can be individually
configured, which increases the employees productivity and leads to greater
social acceptance. Moreover, carrying and using more than one mobile device
one personal and one for business is annoying.452
The solution to improve the employers image concerning the use of mobile
devices might be quite simple: the employee can use their own devices for
personal and business purposes (bring your own devices), and the employer saves
the costs it would incur if it had to purchase these products, which are sometimes
extremely high. Alternatively, the employee can choose their preferred device,
and the employer buys it (choose your own device).453
Although the use of bring your own devices and the occupational use of other
wearable devices might sound simple and the advantages for the employer and
On the other hand, other users of the employees devices (eg, family or friends)
could access company-related data or even business secrets. Using private
wearable technical devices in the company can also be a risk for business secrets,
even if the wearable device is set offline (eg, smart glasses). As a rule, the
employer should prohibit the use of personal wearable devices in the company
because the employees wearable devices cannot be monitored all the time.455
That is not the only risk for company-related data and business secrets. Normally,
personal devices are more vulnerable when it comes to spy software than internal
company networks.456 Another negative aspect for the employer can be the lack
of legally enforceable control options (eg, preventing the use of company-related
data after termination of the employment contract).457
To solve these and other legal problems, internal policies for the use of the
employees own devices and the employers smart devices or other individual
regulations in the working contracts are necessary.458 In Europe, use is often
regulated unitarily by way of works agreements with the relevant competent
employee representatives.
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K. Summary and Outlook
1. Risks
2. Opportunities
While in the past humans participated actively in production, they will now
supervise it. In this sector, AI is thus to be considered an enhancement of
the technical opportunities. The humans who become superfluous will
make greater use of their time to develop and perform innovative services.
They can focus solely on their core competence, this has meant adapting
to the environment and learning.
II. Outlook
In the past, a major part of the population initially worked in the primary
sector (production of raw materials, such as agriculture and mining). In the
course of the first industrial revolution, this trend changed to the effect
that a major part of the working population shifted to the secondary sector
(manufacturing). From the World Wars until today, however, a trend towards
the tertiary (service) sector has been observed. Today, for instance, 70 per cent
of employees work in this sector.466 Some of the opinions expressed by authors
mention fourth and fifth sectors. These sectors are supposed to include services
requiring high intellectual standards or concerning recycling. Other authors
subsume all information services under these sectors. It seems useful to retain
the traditional division into three sectors, because however complex a service
and research may be, it is still a service that is an activity in which a human
uses their individual efforts to render a service for someone else.
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The question arises as to what sector these jobs can be shifted since automation
and digitalisation jobs are being eliminated not only in the production sector but
also in the service sector, as shown above. Therefore, the only alternative would
appear to be the unemployment or targeted training of the affected individuals
within the tertiary sector.467 Training is likely to make sense only in the area of IT.
Not only employees, but also companies that have to date had little to do with
IT and data processing in the form of big data will have to adapt to the technical
innovations to remain competitive. The new labour market is rapidly approaching.
Only the seller who first discovers, develops or even brings the new service model
to the market will earn big profits.468 Moreover, because of the rapid technical
development, the new and profitable services will become outdated very quickly
as well. They will be replaced by other services, which will be based on the more
developed services, and creative solutions will be found to serve the needs of the
customers that are not served by the older service.
The situation of the global labour market should not be overdramatised, however.
Keynes, the well-known economist, predicted a similar development of the labour
market before the second industrial revolution in 1930, for example. It has up to
now always been possible to counterbalance the great wave of unemployment,
despite crises and wars and a third industrial revolution, which has already
passed, through new fields of work and the surplus of the production profits.469
As long as the rise of productivity, initiated by the introduction of AI and robotics,
leads to a growth in orders and profit, employees will not be dismissed. For many
employers, a smart factory without human employees is not an alternative.470
Experts disagree on when the fundamental effects of Industry 4.0 will become
visible. Some economists expect appreciable changes within the next five years,
while others emphasise that the phenomenon Industry 4.0 will be widespread
only in 20 to 30 years. However, the technical change is already visible today.
An example of this phenomenon is robots that are able to handle customers
complaints by talking to them on the telephone.471 This requires like
simultaneous translation a certain degree of intelligence.
It is clear that both blue and white-collar sectors will be affected by a potential
loss of jobs475 and that the digitalisation (and automation) of services is a global
phenomenon. This phenomenon, however, is a far-reaching and diversified field
of advisory services, particularly with regard to labour law. It would be desirable
for the future laws, which will hopefully be secured at the international level
by uniform standards, to be geared to the technological developments and the
increased need for flexibility.
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120 IBA Global Employment Institute