LLMSafetyHub

Employee Monitoring: AI, Privacy, and Workplace Law

AI monitoring tools promise insights into worker productivity, but they also raise tough questions about privacy, discrimination, and labor law.

What modern AI monitoring looks like

Legal and ethical risks

  1. Privacy laws – In some states and countries, continuous surveillance may violate data protection or wiretap laws.
  2. Discrimination – If AI scores employees differently by gender, race, or disability, it could spark lawsuits. This extends beyond hiring into ongoing employment practices.
  3. Labor relations – Unionized workplaces may see AI monitoring as an unfair labor practice if not negotiated.

Insurance implications

Traditional Employment Practices Liability Insurance (EPLI) covers discrimination and wrongful termination claims, but not all surveillance-related claims. Some may fall under privacy or cyber liability policies. Coverage depends heavily on definitions and exclusions. Learn more about what's actually covered in these policies.

Practical safeguards

Takeaway

AI monitoring may improve metrics, but without careful planning it risks lawsuits, regulatory penalties, and employee backlash. Employers should balance efficiency with rights, transparency, and oversight. Before implementing monitoring tools, ask your insurer these five key questions about AI risk coverage.

Download: AI Hiring Risk Checklist (free)

No email required — direct download available.