As employers increasingly turn to automated tools to monitor and collect information on employees to increase efficiency, assess safety issues, streamline candidate screening and assess performance, federal and state regulators are examining privacy issues unique to such practices. Companies should understand the types of surveillance tools available to them as well as the risks and benefits of their use. Counsel from the California Privacy Protection Agency, Sidley Austin and Center for Democracy & Technology delved into workplace monitoring trends and issues at IAPP’s Privacy.Security.Risk. 2024 conference. This second article in a two-part series distilling their insights examines the legal and regulatory landscape applicable to employee privacy and offers compliance considerations. Part one discussed the types of employee data that companies are collecting and how and why they collect it, as well as employees’ concerns and how to navigate them. See “Checklist for Addressing Employee Data Rights Requests” (Jul. 26, 2023).