Couverture de Clearly Conspicuous

Clearly Conspicuous

Clearly Conspicuous

De : Holland & Knight
Écouter gratuitement

À propos de ce contenu audio

Clearly Conspicuous is a podcast series brought to you by Holland & Knight and hosted by consumer protection attorney Anthony DiResta. Here at Holland & Knight we have the working knowledge of how federal and state agencies operate and how courts address consumer protection issues.

Consumer protection laws and regulations impact every dimension of business. Aggressive federal and state agencies are getting the attention of senior executives who are concerned about risk management, compliance challenges and high-profile governmental inquiries. Holland & Knight's Consumer Protection Defense and Compliance Team has the experience, knowledge, relationships and platform to effectively work with our clients to address these issues.

Holland & Knight LLP
Politique et gouvernement Sciences politiques
Épisodes
  • The Core Elements of an Effective Compliance Management System
    Apr 22 2026

    In today's regulatory environment, one weak link in your compliance strategy can expose your business to serious legal, financial and reputational risk. In his latest podcast, consumer protection attorney Anthony DiResta delivers a clear, executive-level look at what it takes to build a compliance management system (CMS) that meets the expectations of regulators including the Federal Trade Commission, Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. and Consumer Financial Protection Bureau. He provides practical insight into the essential prongs of a CMS: board and management oversight, written policies and procedures, effective training, ongoing monitoring and audit, consumer complaint response, risk assessment and third-party oversight. With a strong emphasis on leadership, accountability and culture, this episode shows why compliance is not simply a legal obligation, but a core business function that protects the organization, strengthens decision-making and drives long-term success in the marketplace.

    Afficher plus Afficher moins
    15 min
  • The FTC and Consumer Online Transactions
    Apr 8 2026

    Online commerce may not be a new concept, but the laws governing it continue to evolve. In this episode of "Clearly Conspicuous," consumer protection attorney Anthony DiResta examines the history of the Federal Trade Commission's (FTC) enforcement in the e-commerce space, with a particular focus on negative option billing practices. A negative option is a billing arrangement in which silence or inaction is treated as acceptance of an offer. The FTC drafted a formal amendment to the Negative Option Rule, but it was struck down in July 2025. Despite that setback, the agency has continued to pursue enforcement actions involving false advertising, failure to disclose membership enrollment terms and unnecessarily difficult cancellation processes, all while signaling plans to revisit the rulemaking process. The agency has also emphasized that any platform providing enrollment options must also provide cancellation options that are equally easy to access and use. Mr. DiResta advises that consumers who wish to report fraud, scams or deceptive business practices can do so at reportfraud.ftc.gov.

    Afficher plus Afficher moins
    11 min
  • Where the FTC Stands on AI: Evidence Over Speculation
    Feb 25 2026

    As artificial intelligence (AI) becomes embedded in daily life, the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) has signaled it has no immediate plans to implement AI-specific rules. In this episode, consumer protection attorney Anthony DiResta analyzes recent statements by FTC Bureau of Consumer Protection Director Chris Mufarrige and compares the agency's current enforcement outlook with past regulatory actions. According to Mr. DiResta, the FTC appears focused on targeting bad actors, rather than the technology they are using, and avoiding the pursuit of rules that could slow AI industry growth. That shift is evident in the commission's case against AI writing assistant Rytr, which alleged review generation abuses but was set aside for lack of evidence of actual consumer harm. The outcome aligns with the White House AI Action Plan's emphasis on avoiding regulatory overreach. Overall, Mr. DiResta concludes, AI use that misleads consumers or violates existing laws will still draw federal scrutiny, but the FTC is signaling a more supportive posture toward technological innovation.

    Afficher plus Afficher moins
    8 min
Aucun commentaire pour le moment