AI use in workplaces is growing quickly. A 2025 global study of more than 32,000 workers across 47 countries found 58 percent of employees report using AI at work, with roughly a third using it weekly or daily. Tech Xplore+1
Many employees say AI improves efficiency, idea generation, and work quality. McKinsey & Company+1
But this increased adoption comes with risks. Independent surveys of workers show many admit to inappropriate AI use, including uploading sensitive company data to public AI tools, using AI when it is not allowed, or failing to check the accuracy of AI-generated work. Fast Company+1
Why Banning AI Use Is a Bad Idea
With so many employees already using AI on their phones or home computers, a blanket ban is unlikely to work. Banning AI tends to drive use underground. That hiding can erode trust, lead to undisclosed mistakes, and harm company culture.
Even with a ban, the risks remain: Privacy breaches, improper use, and unrecorded AI-assisted work. Banning only reduces transparency.
A Better Approach: Train Your Workforce
Many of the problems associated with AI use stem from lack of understanding. The better path is to treat AI as a workplace tool and teach employees how to use it responsibly:
- Train them on how AI works, including its limitations.
- Emphasize verification: AI-generated content must be checked before use.
- Teach confidentiality and data-handling best practices.
- Provide examples of acceptable vs prohibited use.
Several workforce-AI studies highlight that adoption of AI tools tends to be far safer and more effective when paired with training, guidance, and human oversight. McKinsey & Company+1
If internal resources are limited, employers can rely on external training programs or vendor-provided onboarding.
Why You Need a Clear AI Policy
A thoughtful AI policy should cover:
- Confidentiality and data protection.
- Disclosure requirements for AI-generated work.
- Verification of AI outputs.
- Human accountability (final decisions remain with people.)
- Intellectual property and attribution guidelines.
- Prohibitions against certain risky AI uses (e.g. replicating someone else’s likeness or voice).
- Clear consequences and reporting mechanisms.
There is no universal AI policy template. What works for one organisation may not suit another.
Encourage Ongoing Learning and Upskilling
Technology evolves quickly. Many experts find that a worker’s “skills half-life” is shrinking; what they know today may need a refresh in just a few years.
Employers should consider offering regular AI training sessions, time for self-directed learning, or even modest budgets for continuous education. Investing in people ensures that AI remains a tool, not a risk.
Final Takeaway
AI is already transforming workplaces. A ban may seem like an easy fix, but it rarely works in practice. A better strategy is to build trust, offer training, set clear policies, and encourage responsible use.
With the right approach, AI can boost productivity, support innovation, and help employees do better work, without compromising compliance or trust.
Calvin To
Calvin To is an employment and labour lawyer at SpringLaw. A former journalist, he advises employers on workplace issues, AI regulation, and investigations, with a strong focus on equity, inclusion, and addressing anti-Asian racism in Canada.


