Bill Text: FL S0126 | 2015 | Regular Session | Introduced
Bill Title: Social Media Privacy
Spectrum: Bipartisan Bill
Status: (Failed) 2015-05-01 - Died in Commerce and Tourism [S0126 Detail]
Download: Florida-2015-S0126-Introduced.html
Florida Senate - 2015 SB 126 By Senator Clemens 27-00222-15 2015126__ 1 A bill to be entitled 2 An act relating to social media privacy; creating s. 3 448.077, F.S.; defining terms; prohibiting an employer 4 from requesting or requiring access to a social media 5 account of an employee or prospective employee under 6 certain circumstances; prohibiting an employer from 7 taking retaliatory personnel action for an employee’s 8 refusal to allow access to his or her social media 9 account; prohibiting an employer from failing or 10 refusing to hire a prospective employee as a result of 11 the prospective employee’s refusal to allow access to 12 his or her social media account; authorizing civil 13 action for a violation; requiring that the civil 14 action be brought within a specified timeframe; 15 providing a penalty for a violation; providing for 16 recovery of attorney fees and court costs; specifying 17 that an employer is not prohibited from seeking access 18 to social media accounts used primarily for the 19 employer’s business purposes; providing an effective 20 date. 21 22 Be It Enacted by the Legislature of the State of Florida: 23 24 Section 1. Section 448.077, Florida Statutes, is created to 25 read: 26 448.077 Employer access to employee social media accounts 27 prohibited.— 28 (1) As used in this section, the term: 29 (a) “Electronic communications device” means a device that 30 uses electronic signals to create, transmit, or receive 31 information, including computers, telephones, personal digital 32 assistants, and other similar devices. 33 (b) “Retaliatory personnel action” has the same meaning as 34 in s. 448.101. 35 (c) “Social media account” means an interactive personal 36 account or profile that an individual establishes and uses 37 through an electronic application, service, or platform to 38 generate or to store content, including, but not limited to, 39 videos, still photographs, blogs, video blogs, instant messages, 40 audio recordings, and e-mail. 41 (2) An employer may not do any of the following: 42 (a) Request or require an employee or prospective employee 43 to take an action that allows the employer to gain access to the 44 employee’s or prospective employee’s social media account, 45 including, but not limited to, requesting him or her to disclose 46 the username, password, or other means of accessing his or her 47 social media account if the social media account’s contents are 48 not available to the general public. 49 (b) Take retaliatory personnel action against an employee 50 as a result of the employee’s refusal to allow the employer 51 access to the employee’s social media account. 52 (c) Fail or refuse to hire a prospective employee as a 53 result of the prospective employee’s refusal to allow the 54 employer access to the prospective employee’s social media 55 account. 56 (3) An employee or prospective employee may bring a civil 57 action against an employer who violates this section in a court 58 located in the county in which the employee or prospective 59 employee resides or where the alleged violation occurred. Such 60 action must be brought within 2 years after the violation 61 occurred. The employee or prospective employee may seek 62 injunctive relief to restrain the employer from continuing to 63 act in violation of this section and may recover damages in an 64 amount equal to the actual damages arising from the violation or 65 $500 per violation, whichever is greater. An employee or 66 prospective employee who prevails is entitled to recover court 67 costs and reasonable attorney fees. 68 (4) This section does not prevent an employer from 69 requesting or requiring an employee to disclose a username, 70 password, or other means of accessing a social media account 71 used primarily for the employer’s business purposes. 72 (5) This section does not prohibit or restrict an employer 73 from complying with a duty to monitor or retain employee 74 communications which is established under state or federal law 75 or by a self-regulatory organization as defined in s. 3(a)(26) 76 of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 and 15 U.S.C. s. 77 78c(a)(26), or from screening a prospective employee who 78 completes an application for employment at a law enforcement or 79 prosecutorial agency or an employee who is the subject of a 80 conduct investigation performed by a law enforcement or 81 prosecutorial agency. 82 Section 2. This act shall take effect October 1, 2015.