
At the state level, the session will highlight emerging legislative trends, including ethical AI development, responsible innovation frameworks, and efforts to harmonize regulations across jurisdictions. Attendees will gain practical insights into managing compliance in a fragmented regulatory environment.
We will also address one of the most pressing concerns for legal professionals: liability. Learn how to integrate AI into legal workflows while minimizing exposure to regulatory or civil risk. Topics include contractual safeguards, disclosure obligations, and risk assessment strategies tailored for legal practitioners.
Learning objectives include:
1. Changing Priorities Under the New Administration: Examine recent changes in the FTC’s enforcement priorities in prosecuting unfair and deceptive trade practices, as well as Executive Orders and legislative proposals.
2. Legislative Trends: Identify states’ and international priorities in regulating artificial intelligence, interstate cooperation efforts, key legislation, and best practices for managing compliance across state borders.
3. Liability Under AI Law: Learn strategies for safely integrating AI into legal workflows while minimizing exposure to regulatory or civil liability. Gain insights into contractual safeguards (e.g., client retention agreements), disclosure obligations, and risk assessment frameworks for AI adoption.
Who would benefit most from attending this program?
1. Lawyers and Legal Professionals (including In-House Counsel, Law Firm Attorneys, Ethics Counsel, and Compliance Officers) who need to understand AI’s impact on consumer law and privacy, as well as stay ahead of litigation trends involving AI systems.
2. Corporate Executives and General Counsel who are responsible for mitigating legal risks associated with AI adoption in their companies and ensuring AI compliance in areas such as HR, marketing, financial decision-making, and product development.
3. Risk Management and Compliance Officers who need to identify potential liability areas for AI use in business operations, particularly concerning discrimination, intellectual property, and fraud, and assist businesses in implementing AI policies that reduce exposure to legal claims.
4. Academics and Policy Makers who help shape AI governance, ethical guidelines, and regulatory approaches, and gain awareness of legal precedents and industry concerns shaping AI policy discussions.
5. Journalists Covering Law and Technology who report on AI-related litigation and regulatory developments and need expert insights on how courts and lawmakers are addressing AI risks.
Title:
AI Compliance: What Do Enforcers and Legislators Care About?
Webinar Date/Time:
July 31, 2025
1:00 PM EDT •12:00 PM CDT •11:00 AM MDT •10:00 AM PDT
Register Now!
Credit:
Bloomberg Industry Group is an approved provider of CLE credits in all states. Individual programs are pre-approved in California, New York, Pennsylvania, and Texas. All other requests for program approval are subject to state-specific approval. The approval process may take approximately four to six weeks in some states.
Speaker:
Travis Yuille is a Legal Analyst on Bloomberg Law’s Litigation team, focusing on privacy and intellectual property. He holds a CIPP/US certification from the International Association of Privacy Professionals (IAPP). Previously, he worked as an engineer in the energy sector, a law clerk in employment law matters, and an editor for the American Intellectual Property Law Association Quarterly Journal at George Washington University. He earned his J.D. from George Washington University with a focus on intellectual property law, and a B.S. in Engineering from Texas A&M University.
Credit:
Bloomberg Industry Group is an approved provider of CLE credits in all states. Individual programs are pre-approved in California, New York, Pennsylvania, and Texas. All other requests for program approval are subject to state-specific approval. The approval process may take approximately four to six weeks in some states.
Speaker:
Travis Yuille is a Legal Analyst on Bloomberg Law’s Litigation team, focusing on privacy and intellectual property. He holds a CIPP/US certification from the International Association of Privacy Professionals (IAPP). Previously, he worked as an engineer in the energy sector, a law clerk in employment law matters, and an editor for the American Intellectual Property Law Association Quarterly Journal at George Washington University. He earned his J.D. from George Washington University with a focus on intellectual property law, and a B.S. in Engineering from Texas A&M University.
By:
Bloomberg Law.
Bloomberg Law.
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