An amendment to New York’s Civil Rights Act requiring private employers to provide written notice to employees whose emails, internet usage or telephone conversations are monitored or intercepted takes effect May 7, according to Husch Blackwell’s “Byte Back.” Written notice must be maintained in electronic form and posted for viewing in an area readily available to affected employees. Employers who do not comply will be subject to fines of $500 for the first offense, $1,000 for the second offense and $3,000 for each subsequent offense.
New York’s employee monitoring law takes effect May 7
Related stories
A view from Brussels: Commission's tough week on data transfers
Decoding India's draft DPDPA rules for the world
Notes from the Asia-Pacific region: Australia ends 2024, starts new year with strong regulatory activity
European General Court renders impactful decision on data transfer litigation
Notas de la directora general IAPP América Latina, 8 enero 2025