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AI Today in 5

AI Today in 5: October 13, 2025, The Bring Out Your Dead Issue Edition

Welcome to AI Today in 5, the newest edition to the Compliance Podcast Network. Each day, Tom Fox will bring you 5 stories about AI, so start your day, sit back, enjoy a cup of morning coffee, and listen in to the AI Today In 5, all from the Compliance Podcast Network. Each day, we consider four stories from the business world, compliance, ethics, risk management, leadership, or general interest related to AI.

Top AI stories include:

  1. Can Agentic AI lead to security lapses? (Bobs Guide)
  2. Current AI security issues. (Bloomberg Law)
  3. Wolters Kluwer jumps into AI. (CCI)
  4. Agentic AI and data privacy issues. (Security Systems News)
  5. Deepfakes of deceased people. (NBC News)

For more information on the use of AI in Compliance programs, my new book, Upping Your Game. You can purchase a copy of the book on Amazon.com

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Compliance Tip of the Day

Compliance Tip of the Day – Rev Rec, Internal Controls and Compliance

Welcome to “Compliance Tip of the Day,” the podcast that brings you daily insights and practical advice on navigating the ever-evolving landscape of compliance and regulatory requirements. Whether you’re a seasoned compliance professional or just starting your journey, our goal is to provide you with bite-sized, actionable tips to help you stay ahead in your compliance efforts. Join us as we explore the latest industry trends, share best practices, and demystify complex compliance issues to keep your organization on the right side of the law. Tune in daily for your dose of compliance wisdom, and let’s make compliance a little less daunting, one tip at a time.

This week, we consider issues around internal controls in a best practices compliance program. Today, we consider the inter-relationship of revenue recognition, internal controls, and compliance.

For more on this topic, check out The Compliance Handbook: A Guide to Operationalizing Your Compliance Program, 6th edition, which LexisNexis recently released. It is available here.

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Daily Compliance News

Daily Compliance News: October 13, 2025, The Glue Employees Edition

Welcome to the Daily Compliance News. Each day, Tom Fox, the Voice of Compliance brings to you compliance related stories to start your day. Sit back, enjoy a cup of morning coffee and listen in to the Daily Compliance News. All, from the Compliance Podcast Network. Each day we consider four stories from the business world, compliance, ethics, risk management, leadership or general interest for the compliance professional.

Top stories include:

  • Why do you need glue employees? (WSJ)
  • Corruption puts Moroccan hospitals at breaking point. (France24)
  • Employers need to be careful when disciplining for EE social media posts. (FT)
  • Coinbase and Cruise alum start a crypto compliance firm. (FortuneCrypto)
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Blog

Nights in White Compliance: Lessons from John Lodge and the Moody Blues for Today’s Compliance Professional

1, 2, 3, 4. While that sequence is well known, it is also one of the greatest rock n’ roll count-ins. It opens the John Lodge-written song “Ride My See Saw” by The Moody Blues. We lost John Lodge last week. The Moody Blues are in my top 5 bands of all time and were one of the leading lights of progressive (prog) rock.

According to his New York Times (NYT) obituary, John Lodge and Justin Hayward joined the band in 1966, replacing two founding members, Denny Laine and Clint Warwick. The classic Moody Blues lineup was now in place with Lodge and Hayward, with Mike Pinder on keyboards, Graeme Edge on drums, and Ray Thomas on flute and vocals.

It was their groundbreaking release of the 1967 album, “Days of Future Passed,” that changed rock n’ roll forever. It fused rock and orchestral music, establishing The Moody Blues as pioneers of progressive rock. It was one of the first rock albums to be structured as a concept album, telling a story over a 24-hour cycle. It propelled the band to international success, particularly through the enduring hit single “Nights in White Satin“. It offered elaborate arrangements, lush contributions from the London Festival Orchestra, and the plaintive sound of Mr. Pinder’s Mellotron, an electromechanical keyboard that plays samples of different instruments.

While the Moody Blues had hits for the rest of the century, it was their development of prog rock for which they will always be known. Today, I want to pay tribute to Lodge and explore five timeless lessons compliance professionals can learn from him and from The Moody Blues.

1. Innovation Begins When You Refuse to Accept the Status Quo

When Days of Future Passed was released in 1967, it was unlike anything listeners had ever heard. The Moody Blues combined rock instrumentation with full orchestral arrangements, creating a symphonic concept album that broke every rule of the time. Instead of focusing on singles or radio hits, they presented a continuous musical experience that told a story, a day in the life of ordinary people, elevated to art.

For compliance professionals, the lesson is clear: the most meaningful innovation happens when you refuse to accept “the way it’s always been.” Lodge and his bandmates didn’t abandon structure; they reimagined it. Likewise, modern compliance programs shouldn’t merely follow old templates. Whether it is integrating AI-driven monitoring, developing behavioral analytics, or crafting narrative-based training, progress comes from seeing beyond the checklist and daring to compose something new. In other words, the future of compliance is not mechanical; it is symphonic.

2. Harmony Requires Every Voice

The Moody Blues were more than the sum of their parts. Lodge’s melodic bass anchored Justin Hayward’s soaring vocals, Ray Thomas’s flute added ethereal texture, and Graeme Edge’s drumming provided both rhythm and poetry. Each member contributed a distinct voice, yet they blended perfectly into harmony.

A world-class compliance program operates the same way. No single person or department can carry the tune alone. Compliance requires a cross-functional orchestra; legal, HR, finance, audit, operations all playing from the same score. When departments act in isolation, the result is noise; when they work in harmony, it is music. Lodge’s approach to collaboration reminds us that leadership in compliance is not about conducting with authority but coordinating with empathy. The best Chief Compliance Officers listen as much as they lead.

3. Build Systems That Evolve

Progressive rock, by its very name, implies evolution, the willingness to progress. The Moody Blues constantly evolved their sound: from the baroque experimentation of On the Threshold of a Dream to the electronic textures of Long Distance Voyager. They did not stagnate; they adapted.

Compliance programs, too, must evolve with changing times. Regulations, markets, and technologies shift. What worked in 2015 may be obsolete in 2025. The DOJ’s 2024 Evaluation of Corporate Compliance Programs underscores this need for adaptability, requiring that programs be “dynamic, data-informed, and risk-based.” Lodge’s musical journey embodies that principle. He never let nostalgia stop innovation. Compliance officers should adopt the same mindset, continuously evaluating controls, integrating feedback, and embracing technology to remain relevant. Evolution, not inertia, sustains credibility.

4. Tell a Story That Inspires, Not Just Informs

The Moody Blues were not just musicians; they were storytellers. Songs like Nights in White SatinQuestion, and Isn’t Life Strange resonated because they connected emotionally. They did not lecture; instead, they invited listeners to reflect. Each album was an emotional arc, designed to make people feel, not just think.

That is precisely the challenge and opportunity for compliance communication. Too often, we rely on policies and PowerPoints that inform but fail to inspire. John Lodge understood that engagement requires narrative. Compliance professionals can learn from that: training should tell stories, not recite statutes. Whistleblower programs should humanize courage, not just codify reporting channels. Codes of conduct should speak to values, not just violations. In short, emotion drives ethics. Lodge showed us that communication, when done with authenticity, can change behavior. Compliance leaders should compose their messaging the same way musicians write songs: with heart, structure, and meaning.

5. Legacy Matters More Than Fame

Though The Moody Blues achieved global recognition, they never chased popularity at the expense of integrity. Their albums demanded patience and reflection,  qualities at odds with commercial radio. Yet their influence endures precisely because they valued substance over spectacle. Lodge once said he wanted to “create music that would last.” And it has.

For compliance professionals, this is the ultimate lesson: sustainability over visibility. A compliance program’s success is not measured by awards or press releases but by resilience, the quiet trust employees place in doing the right thing even when no one’s watching. Lodge’s passing reminds us that legacies are built note by note, day by day. In compliance, every investigation handled with fairness, every training delivered with clarity, every policy written with purpose, these are our symphonies. The work may seem routine, but over time, it becomes timeless.

Closing Reflections: From Melodies to Ethics

As we reflect on John Lodge’s contribution to music, we can see the deeper resonance for our own profession. Progressive rock does not simply entertain; it continues to expand what music could be. Likewise, compliance today is no longer a back-office function; rather, it is a driver of culture, innovation, and trust.

Both disciplines, music and compliance, strive for harmony amid complexity. Both require structure balanced with creativity. Both depend on collaboration, communication, and conviction.

So as we say goodbye to John Lodge, perhaps we can also rededicate ourselves to what he and The Moody Blues represented: the belief that art and ethics can elevate humanity. Because in the end, every great compliance program, like every great song, seeks the same outcome: to move people toward something better.

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A special thanks to Alison Taylor, who many years ago named me the Rock’ N’ Roll Compliance Blogger. It is my favorite moniker of all time and one I still take seriously. 

Tom’s Top 5 John Lodge Songs (all links from YouTube)

  1. Ride My See Saw – Lodge said of the song, “It started, really, like a lot of my rock ‘n’ roll songs, as a rhythm track building up. “I wanted it to be this chorale, where we’re all singing these harmonies through the song — it’s interesting that way,” he added.
  2. I’m Just a Singer (in a rock n roll band)- Lodge retook the lead for this Top 20 track, the last single of the Moody Blues’ first phase. Lodge’s message was world peace through music, singing that “I’m just a-wandering on the face of this earth/Meeting so many people who are trying to be free…Now we’ve found the key.” The song marked the last time the group used a Mellotron, which was one of its sonic hallmarks, while the saxophone sound came from a Chamberlin keyboard.
  3. (Evening) Time to Get Away – Lodge made his prog rock mark on the group’s thematic masterwork first with “Lunch Break: Peak Hour” but more memorable with the airy “(Evening) Time to Get Away),” part of “The Afternoon” suite that kicked off side two in tandem with Hayward’s “Forever Afternoon (Tuesday?).”
  4. Natural Avenue – Part of the album Lodge and Hayward made together during the Moodys’ hiatus, this kicked off the second side of the album with symphonic bombast. Its theme, established in the title, maintained Lodge’s heartfelt belief in the divine (spiritually more than religiously) power of music.
  5. Gemini Dream – This song emerged from a jam session built from a dance-floor targeted beat, with Lodge’s chugging bass pushing the groove. Lodge’s original title, by the way, was “Touring in the USA,” while Hayward came up with “Backstage Pass;” they settled on “Gemini Dream” as a representation of their dual personalities. It received an ASCAP songwriting award for the track, which reached its No. 12 peak as the Moody’s best for a new song in eight years.

Resources:

Top 10 John Lodge Songs

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FCPA Compliance Report

FCPA Compliance Report – From the Courtroom to Compliance: FCPA Challenges and Strategies with James Koukios

Join Tom Fox as he welcomes back MoFo partner James M. Koukios to discuss the themes and strategies observed in recent FCPA trials and the DOJ’s prosecutorial approach. They explore the importance of making juries care about corruption cases, the themes of abuse of power and financial motive, and the significance of concealment in establishing guilt. The conversation also touches on the future of FCPA trials and the DOJ’s commitment to prosecuting individuals involved in corporate misconduct. And of course, Go Blue!

Key highlights:

  • Making juries care about the impact of corruption is crucial.
  • Abuse of power is a central theme in corruption cases.
  • Concealment of actions indicates consciousness of guilt.
  • Compliance programs must emphasize transparency and documentation.
  • Jurors expect good governance and are sensitive to abuse of power.
  • Financial incentives in corporations should align with compliance.
  • Prosecuting individuals remains a priority for the DOJ.

Resources:

Morrison Foerster

James Koukios

Expect DOJ To Repeat 4 Themes From 2024’s FCPA Trials

Tom Fox

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For more information on the use of AI in Compliance programs, my new book, Upping Your Game, is available. You can purchase a copy of the book on Amazon.com.

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Sunday Book Review

Sunday Book Review: October 12, 2025, The Ancient Greece Edition

In the Sunday Book Review, Tom Fox considers books that would interest compliance professionals, business executives, or anyone curious about the subject. It could be books about business, compliance, history, leadership, current events, or any other topic that might interest Tom. Today, we review four top books on Ancient Greece and antiquity.

 

  • Ancient Greece by Jeremy McInerney
  • Plato and the Tyrant by James Romm
  • The Odyssey by Daniel Mendelsohn
  • The Greek Tyrants by A. Andrewes

Resources:

The Sunday Book Review was recently honored as one of the world’s Top 100 Book Podcasts.

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10 For 10

10 For 10: Top Compliance Stories For the Week Ending, October 11, 2025

Welcome to 10 For 10, the podcast that brings you the week’s Top 10 compliance stories in one podcast each week. Tom Fox, the Voice of Compliance, presents the compliance stories you need to know to end your busy week. Sit back, and in 10 minutes, hear about the stories every compliance professional should be aware of from the prior week. Every Saturday, 10 For 10 highlights the most important news, insights, and analysis for the compliance professional, all curated by the Voice of Compliance, Tom Fox. Get your weekly filling of compliance stories with 10 for 10, a podcast produced by the Compliance Podcast Network.

Top weekly stories include:

  • E-sports and the data privacy maze. (Bloomberg Law)
  • Does Homan have to return the $50K? (NYT)
  • Star witness in Menendez trial to be sentenced. (NYT)
  • Halkbank faces criminal charges. (FT)
  • Saudi mega-construction project under ABC investigation. (Semafor)
  • PE and the Ethics of Drug Research. (NYT)
  • $100MM wine fraud in NYC. (Bloomberg)
  • Crony capitalism and corruption. (NPR)
  • Johnson and Johnson ordered to pay $966MM in talc case. (NYT)
  • Trump is considering pardons for Maxwell and Diddy. (Reuters)

You can check out the Daily Compliance News for four curated compliance and ethics-related stories each day, here.

Connect with Tom 

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You can purchase a copy of my new book, Upping Your Game, on Amazon.com.

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Data Driven Compliance

Data Driven Compliance – Navigating Self-Disclosure Under the FTPF and Updated ECCT

Welcome to Season 2 of the award-winning Data Driven Compliance. In this new season, we will look at the new Failure to Prevent Fraud offense. Join host Tom Fox as we explore this new law and how to comply with it through the lens of data-driven compliance. This podcast is sponsored by konaAI. In this episode of Season 2, Tom is joined by Simon Airey and Caitlyn Sheard, partners at McDermott Will & Schulte LLP, and both experts in the fields of investigation and compliance from both sides of the Atlantic.

We take a deep dive into their recent article, ‘Cross Atlantic Impact, DOJ and SFO, Self-Reporting and Enforcement Priorities,’ exploring the critical topic of self-disclosure in the context of both U.S. and UK jurisdictions. The discussion covers the incentives for self-reporting under the DOJ’s updated policies, the Serious Fraud Office’s new guidance on voluntary disclosure in the UK, and the broadening scope of anti-economic crime laws, including the UK’s significant changes effective from 2023. The conversation highlights the complexities and strategic challenges companies face in making self-disclosure decisions, the emerging enforcement focus on cartels and economic crimes, and the ongoing robust enforcement of anti-corruption laws such as the FCPA and the UK Bribery Act.

Key highlights:

  • Discussion on Self-Disclosure Incentives
  • Challenges and Implications of Self-Disclosure
  • Changes in UK Law and Its Impact
  • Global Self-Disclosure Strategies

Resources:

McDermott Will & Schulte LLP

Simon Airey

Caitlin Sheard

Cross-Atlantic Impact: DOJ and SFO Self-Reporting and Enforcement Priorities

Click here for konaAI White Paper Rethinking Compliance: Practical Steps for Adapting to the UK’s New Fraud Legislation

Connect with Tom Fox on LinkedIn

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Reel Creators of the Texas Hill Country

Reel Creators of the Texas Hill Country: Exploring the Art of Storytelling with Susan Wilder

Welcome to Reel Creators of the Texas Hill Country, where we dive deep into the heart of filmmaking in one of America’s most unique and captivating landscapes. From rolling hills and rustic towns to thriving cities and hidden gems, the Texas Hill Country offers endless inspiration for filmmakers, and we’re here to uncover every aspect. In this podcast, we’ll meet the passionate directors, cinematographers, screenwriters, and crews who bring their creative visions to life in this storied region. Join us as we explore the challenges, rewards, and unique stories that make filmmaking here an art of its own. Whether you’re a seasoned pro or simply curious about the world behind the camera, Reel Creators of the Texas Hill Country promises to be your all-access pass to the vibrant filmmaking community of the Hill Country and beyond.

In this episode, host Tom Fox welcomes Susan Wilder, a seasoned storyteller, actor, filmmaker, and artist. Susan shares her journey from starting as an actor later in life to transitioning to the other side of the camera as a director and filmmaker. She discusses the importance of storytelling both personally and professionally, the creative process behind directing and filmmaking, and her directorial debut with the film ‘What Remains. Additionally, Susan offers insight into character development, the collaborative nature of filmmaking, and the importance of authenticity. For anyone passionate about storytelling, whether in compliance or the arts, Susan’s message is clear—pursue your passion with dedication and creativity.

Key highlights:

  • The Importance of Storytelling
  • Transitioning from Acting to Filmmaking
  • Directorial Debut and Current Projects
  • Creative Process and Character Development
  • Artistic Pursuits and Inspirations
  • Advice for Aspiring Storytellers

Resources:

Susan Wilder on Instagram

Texas Hill Country Podcast Network

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2 Gurus Talk Compliance

2 Gurus Talk Compliance – Episode 61 – The Back to the Future Edition

What happens when two top compliance commentators get together? They talk compliance, of course. Join Tom Fox and Kristy Grant-Hart in 2 Gurus Talk Compliance as they discuss the latest compliance issues in this week’s episode!

 

Stories this week include:

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Prove Your Worth

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