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I Refuse to Use My Personal Laptop for Work Anymore—HR Got Involved

Work and personal life can easily mix, especially when employers expect employees to use their own devices for office tasks. It raises real questions about employee rights, HR policies, and data security at work. One office employee shared how saying no to using a personal laptop for company work quickly turned into a bigger HR issue than expected.
Lily sent us a letter.

Hi Bright Side,
I’ve been with my company for about two years, and overall it’s been fine, but one issue has been driving me crazy. My work laptop broke about six months ago. I immediately filed an IT ticket and asked the admin for a replacement. Nothing happened. I followed up multiple times. Still silence.
Eventually, my manager told me, very casually, to just use my personal laptop. She said “Everyone does it” and acted like I was being difficult for even questioning it. But this is my private device with my personal files, photos, banking info, everything. Plus I know there are data security policies about where company files should live.
When I pushed back, she laughed and told me I should be grateful I even had a job.
That rubbed me the wrong way. I wasn’t refusing to work. I just wanted proper equipment like any employee should have. So I gathered every IT ticket I’d submitted, every unanswered email, and every message where she explicitly told me to store company data on my personal computer. I forwarded all of it to HR, mainly to protect myself in case something went wrong.
That same afternoon, she suddenly went from dismissive to very nervous. HR apparently called her right away. Turns out they take data security, employee equipment policies, and liability way more seriously than she thought.
Now I finally have a company laptop on the way, but things feel awkward.
Part of me wonders if I escalated too fast. Another part thinks I simply stood up for reasonable workplace boundaries. What do you think?
—Lily
What do you guys think about Lily’s situation? Was she right to push back and involve HR, or would you have handled it differently? If you were in her place, would you keep working on your personal laptop to avoid tension, or stand firm about boundaries and company responsibility? Let us know your comments.
Comments
How did you ESCALATE TOO FAST? YOU needed a laptop for working, you COULD NOT (per company policy), use YOUR PERSONAL LAPTOP. What else could you have done?
Nope, not too fast. If anything, it's TOO SLOW. 6 month without laptop to work ? That's all of your manager decision to blame.
I agree
Blame should all fall on manager.
I use my personal laptop to work and I don’t see any problem with it
Go ahead, that your own neck to risk for.
That's fine, if you don't, but some firms don't allow it and some people don't like it. In those cases, it is a problem,
EXACTLY
Maybe your company, doesn't have anything important enough, to worry about getting out. Nothing proprietary or trademarked.
I work for the government, we definitely CANNOT use our personal computer for work!
As there should be. Vital information really damaging if there's leak out. Also not only you can be fired, you can also get jailed, or get "accident" if you can't protect it in your PERSONAL STORAGE. Always avoid fatally risque act.
You're not wrong in this. And I'm even surprised that none of your coworkers spoke up before since yr manager said 'everyone does it' ??
Like usual, they scared with higher up and don't want to speak
If its in your contract, then demand a laptop!
whats the problem with working from your personal?
For starters, doing so may be against company policy. Second, your personal computer may not be as secure as you think! Three, your personal laptop can be stolen or damaged, and information compromised, so you can be held liable if you encounter a security breach and confidential information gets leaked!
They DID. Manager said use "YOUR PERSONAL" one. That is against company rules.
Demand a laptop.
Good for you. She is the One who should feel uncomfortable. What a snide comment, about you being lucky to have a job. I'm thinking they're probably lucky to have you in the face of all that. Nah you follow procedure. You protected the company security. Tell me what she did about that.
good
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