Oklahoma Code § 40-173.2

Title 40. Labor: Prohibited actions regarding personal social media
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A.  No employer, as defined by paragraph 1 of Section 1301 of
Title 25 of the Oklahoma Statutes, located in this state shall:
1.  Require an employee or prospective employee to disclose a
user name and password or other means of authentication for
accessing a personal online social media account through an
electronic communications device;
2.  Require an employee or prospective employee to access the
employee's or prospective employee's personal online social media
account in the presence of the employer in a manner that enables the
employer to observe the contents of such accounts if the account's
contents are not available to the general public, except pursuant to
an investigation as provided in subsection D of this act;
3.  Take retaliatory personnel action that materially and
negatively affects the terms and conditions of employment against an
employee solely for refusal to give the employer the user name or
password to the employee's personal online social media account; or
4.  Refuse to hire a prospective employee solely as a result of
the prospective employee's refusal to give the employer the user
name and password to the prospective employee's personal online
social media account.
B.  An employer may request or require an employee to disclose
any user name and password for accessing:
1.  Any computer system, information technology network, or
electronic communications device provided or subsidized by the
employer; or
2.  Any accounts or services provided by the employer or by
virtue of the employee's employment relationship with the employer
or that the employee uses for business purposes.

C.  If, through the use of an electronic device or program that
monitors an employer's network or the use of employer provided
devices, an employer inadvertently receives an employee's user name
and password or other authentication information, the employer is
not liable for having such information, but may not use the
information to access an employee's personal online social media
account.
D.  Nothing in this section shall prevent an employer from:
1.  Conducting an investigation:
a. for the purpose of ensuring compliance with applicable
laws, regulatory requirements or prohibitions against
work-related employee misconduct based on the receipt
of specific information about activity on a personal
online social media account or personal online social
media service by an employee or other source, or
b. of an employee's actions based on the receipt of
specific information about the unauthorized transfer
of an employer's proprietary information, confidential
information or financial data to a personal online
social media account or personal online social media
service by an employee or other source;
2.  Conducting an investigation as specified in subparagraphs a
and b of paragraph 1 of this subsection includes requiring the
employee's cooperation to share the content that has been reported
in order to make a factual determination.
E.  Nothing in this section shall be construed to prevent an
employer from complying with the requirements of state or federal
statutes, rules or regulations, case law, or rules of self-
regulatory organizations.
F.  Nothing in this section shall be construed to prohibit an
employer from accessing its computer system or information
technology network, including electronic communications devices
owned by the employer.  Neither this section nor any other Oklahoma
law shall prohibit an employer from reviewing or accessing personal
online social media accounts that an employee may choose to use
while utilizing an employer's computer system, information
technology network or an employer's electronic communication device.
G.  An employee or prospective employee may bring a civil action
against an employer who violates this section in a court located in
the county in which the alleged violation occurred.  Such action
shall be brought within six (6) months after the alleged violation
occurred.  The employee or prospective employee may seek injunctive
relief to restrain the employer from continuing to act in violation
of this section, but must show by clear and convincing evidence that
the employer violated this act.  The only damages recoverable for a
violation of this act are Five Hundred Dollars ($500.00) per
violation.  No punitive or emotional damages are recoverable, and

this section may not be utilized for the basis of a public policy
tort.
H.  As used in this section:
1.  "Electronic communications device" means a device that uses
electronic signals to create, transmit or receive information,
including computers, telephones, personal digital assistants and
other similar devices; and
2.  "Personal online social media account" means an online
account that is used by an employee or prospective employee
exclusively for personal communications that an individual
establishes and uses through an electronic application, service or
platform used to generate or store content, including, but not
limited to, videos, still photographs, blogs, video blogs, instant
messages, audio recordings or email that is not available to the
general public.

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