BridgeTower Media Newswires//April 6, 2026//
Two recent federal court decisions are raising a new question for employers: Could your employees’ AI chat histories show up as evidence in a lawsuit?
The answer, at least for now, is that it depends on the circumstances. And that uncertainty highlights the risk.
What’s happening
As generative AI tools like ChatGPT and Claude become part of everyday work, courts are starting to treat AI conversations as a new category of business records potentially subject to discovery in litigation.
Two February 2026 decisions, issued the same day by different federal courts, highlight just how unsettled this area is:
Why this matters for HR and business teams
For most organizations, this is an issue of clear and present concern. Employees are already using AI tools to draft emails and documents, summarize workplace issues, research HR policies or employment questions, and prepare responses to complaints or disputes.
Those interactions can create a digital paper trail that may later be:
Importantly, courts may treat those records as shared with a third party, which can weaken confidentiality claims.
The key risk: the ‘it feels private’ problem
AI tools often feel like internal assistants. But legally, they may function more like external platforms.
That distinction matters. In at least one ruling, a court emphasized that AI tools are not lawyers, conversations may not be confidential, and data may be stored or shared under platform terms.
As a result, employees could unintentionally create discoverable records while thinking they’re working privately.
What employers should do now
This isn’t about banning AI. It’s about using it with your eyes open.
Here are a few practical steps:
AI is already part of how work gets done. Now it’s becoming part of how work gets examined in court.
For employers, the shift is simple but important: Treat AI interactions less like private notes and more like potential business records, because that’s how courts may see them.