Microsoft is preparing to roll out a new Microsoft Teams feature that can automatically update an employee’s work location when they connect to their company’s Wi-Fi network.
The feature, called Workplace Check-in, expands Teams’ existing workplace location tools and is intended to help coworkers see which office building someone is working from when they’re on-site, according to Futurism.
How Workplace Check-in Works
When enabled, Teams can detect when an employee connects to a company’s Wi-Fi network and update their work location to reflect the building where they are working.
Microsoft says the feature is disabled by default and employees must choose whether to share their location. The company also says the feature is designed to help colleagues coordinate in-person work rather than monitor attendance.
Privacy Questions Remain
Although the feature is optional, privacy advocates have raised concerns that some employers could require employees to enable it as part of workplace policies.
The announcement follows recent discussion among Microsoft Teams users about workplace privacy. During a question-and-answer session on Reddit, Microsoft said Teams does not automatically track employee movements, attendance, or maintain historical location data, emphasizing that work location sharing is optional and intended for collaboration.
As organizations balance collaboration with employee privacy, tools that share workplace location are likely to remain under close scrutiny from both employers and workers.













