I'm a little confused. The ACM Author Rights and Publishing Policy states:
ACM authors hold the right to post copies of their own peer-reviewed accepted ACM works on any non-commercial repository or aggregation that does not duplicate ACM tables of contents, i.e., whose patterns of links do not substantially duplicate an ACM-copyrighted volume or issue. Non-commercial repositories are here understood as repositories owned by non-profit organizations that do not charge a fee for accessing deposited articles and that do not sell advertising or otherwise profit from serving articles.
However, the ACM Fair Access site states:
Can I publish the published version of my publication on arXiv? No. An ACM author cannot grant arXiv.org or any other publisher rights to distribute their works that have been published by ACM.
SHERPA/Romeo shows ACM as being a "Green Publisher", which would support the case that I can upload to ArXiv.
Dissem.in states that I can upload pre- or postprints under certain circumstances, but does not explicitly mention Arxiv, positively or negatively.
So, what is it? Can I submit a paper I published with an ACM Conference (ACM WiSec, if that makes a difference) to ArXiv or not? As I understand it, ArXiv is a non-profit, so it would fit the terms of the publishing policy. Or is this related to the rights you have to grant ArXiv upon submission?
If I can only publish a specific version of the paper, which one?