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TD Bank Tracks Employee Work: Privacy Concerns Mount
20 Jun
Summary
- TD Bank is using software to monitor employee work time.
- The tool tracks browser use, internal chats, and meetings.
- Employees question privacy and consent regarding the software.

Toronto-Dominion Bank has informed some employees in its financial crimes and risk management team about the deployment of software to monitor their work activities. The program, named WorkiQ, will track time spent on browsers, internal chat applications, and meetings, aiming to improve productivity and resource allocation. This initiative has led to employee questions regarding privacy and consent.
TD asserts that the deployment is a common industry practice and that safeguards are in place to protect employee privacy. The software vendor, ActiveOps, describes WorkiQ as a tool for "employee and wellbeing intelligence." The bank's management indicated the tool underwent a privacy review and will not record conversations, but will show employee activity levels and application usage, such as Excel.
This implementation follows TD's expansion of its financial crimes unit after significant fines for money laundering violations in the U.S. The bank aims to regain transparency lost in remote work environments, noting that the tool will help identify productivity pain points and manual process inefficiencies. Similar monitoring practices have been noted at other financial institutions like JPMorgan and tech companies like Meta.