I see. It sounds very unlikely and I’m fine with the personal data I have of my company computer being exposed within the context of an investigation and a trial. I guess it may be more scary in some countries.
> It sounds very unlikely and I’m fine with the personal data I have of my company computer being exposed within the context of an investigation and a trial.
Okay, lets talk about something more likely: your communications are not private - when you connect to an https URL you expect that your password is never in the clear.
With most organisations I have worked with/for, they almost always perform MitM on all TLS connections, and it works seamlessly (i.e. without you knowing) because their certificate is on the machine.
Only the very small and/or very poorly-run organisations aren't doing this, because unless they do the MitM, the network tools they use to detect malicious activity on their network cannot do Deep Packet Inspection (tools such as Darktrace).
It's exceedingly unlikely that the password you used to log into your bank account from your work computer is indecipherable to your network operators. It may as well be in the clear within the network.