Volunteer State (Tennessee) Prohibits Employers From Asking Employees, Applicants to Volunteer Access to Social Media, Internet Accounts


Effective January 1, 2015, Tennessee employers, including government entities, will be prohibited from requesting or requiring access to the private social networking or online accounts of employees and job applicants under the Volunteer State’s ”Employee Online Privacy Act of 2014,” signed by Governor Bill Haslam. Our Tennessee colleagues outline the key provisions of the law, including some of the key exceptions.

The exceptions will be helpful for employers. For example, some of the them permit employers to:

There are other exceptions in the Tennessee law, but not all of the same exceptions exist in the laws enacted in the other states across the country, such as Arkansas, California, Colorado, Illinois, Maryland, Michigan, Nevada, New Jersey, New Mexico, Oregon, Utah, Washington, and more recently in Wisconsin. Employers will need to be careful in navigating these laws nationwide. At the same time, as more employers explore BYOD and other monitoring technologies, including spyware and keylogging, they will need to consider the risks those practices and technologies may present under statutes like the one in Tennessee.


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National Law Review, Volume IV, Number 134