Florida's two-party-consent communications statute has generated its own wave of website session-recording claims.
The Florida Security of Communications Act (FSCA), Fla. Stat. § 934.01 et seq., is a two-party-consent statute analogous to California's CIPA. Plaintiffs have used it to challenge session-replay and tracking scripts that capture visitor interactions without consent.
Florida has become an active venue for these filings, and the analysis again centers on whether tracking tools intercept a visitor's communication before consent is obtained.
Whatever the statute, the underlying test is practical: do third-party trackers collect or transmit visitor data before the visitor consents? RegSentry runs a real browser against your site and shows you exactly that — which scripts fire, when, and whether a consent banner actually held them back.
See what fires on your site before consent — free, 30 seconds, no signup.
Real browser scan, no signup to run it. You see a summary of the findings; the full report with every tracker unlocks with your email.