Workplace privacy law · AR
Arkansas workplace electronic monitoring law and what it means for organizational health intelligence.
The governing statute is Ark. Code § 5-60-120. One-party consent for interception of communications.
Arkansas combines a one-party consent posture with a personal-social-media protection — common in the post-2012 wave of state laws.
Consent posture
One-party consent
Primary citation
Ark. Code § 5-60-120
Enforcement
Arkansas Department of Labor & Licensing; Attorney General for criminal wiretap matters.
Notification requirements in Arkansas
- No state-specific notification requirement; federal floor applies
- Personal social media accounts protected from compelled disclosure
Other relevant Arkansas statutes
Ark. Code § 11-2-124
Limits employer ability to require disclosure of personal social media account credentials.
Employer obligations
- Federal Electronic Communications Privacy Act (18 U.S.C. § 2510 et seq.) applies. ECPA permits employer monitoring of business communications under the business-purpose and consent exceptions.
- No state-mandated written notice for workplace electronic monitoring.
- Cannot require employees to disclose personal social media credentials.
How ClarityLift’s privacy posture maps to Arkansas law
ClarityLift surfaces team-level patterns from the conversations a customer already has in Slack or Teams. The architecture is privacy-first by design. No DMs. Ever. Aggregate signals only. Minimum group threshold of 10. No individual scores. Customers retain full control of which channels are connected.
For employers operating in Arkansas, the relevant requirements typically resolve at the policy and channel-selection layer, not the technical layer. ClarityLift does not record voice or video, so one-party consent statutes for audio/video recording are structurally inapplicable.
Compliance with Ark. Code § 5-60-120 is achieved by the customer through written notice to employees (where required), an acceptable-use policy, and clear channel-connection scope. ClarityLift’s consent architecture supports this directly: every connected workspace surfaces the channel list, retention posture, and group-floor minimum to admins.
This is not legal advice. Employers should review their specific monitoring practices with counsel before deploying any workplace analytics tool.
Frequently asked
Does ClarityLift read individual employee messages?
No. ClarityLift processes communication signals at the aggregate team level. No individual scores are produced. The minimum group threshold of 10 is structurally prevented in code — teams below that floor never surface signals.
What does Arkansas consider a "private" communication for monitoring purposes?
Under Ark. Code § 5-60-120, the operative question is whether the communication was made with a reasonable expectation of privacy. Workplace channels under an acceptable-use policy that defines them as business communications generally fall within the business-purpose exception. DMs and personal channels are different — and ClarityLift excludes them by design.
Are DMs ever processed by ClarityLift?
No. DMs are rejected at the ingest gate before any classification, signal generation, or storage. This is structurally prevented, not a policy choice.
Does the Arkansas consent statute apply to ClarityLift?
Arkansas's consent statute applies primarily to recording of voice or wire communications. ClarityLift does not record voice. Text-based communication processing falls under the business-communications and consent exceptions of ECPA.
See ClarityLift’s privacy architecture before you deploy in Arkansas.
Aggregate signals only. No DMs. Minimum group threshold of 10. The compliance posture is built into the architecture, not bolted on after.