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AI Today in 5

AI Today in 5: August 25, 2025, The AI as Content Moderators Episode

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 to 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 about AI.

Top AI stories:

  • TikTok to move to AI as content moderators. (WSJ)
  • Preparing a financial services firm for AI. (Morgan Lewis)
  • AI for Med Billing Market to exceed $22bn. (Global News Wire)
  • The AI backlash is here. (Fortune)
  • Australia orders Binance audit over AI. (Bloomberg)

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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FCPA Compliance Report

FCPA Compliance Report – Vince Walden on Leveraging AI and Machine Learning for Fraud Detection

Welcome to the award-winning FCPA Compliance Report, the longest-running podcast in compliance. In this episode, Tom Fox welcomes back Vince Walden, CEO of konaAI, a Covasant company.

In this podcast, they take a deep dive into the UK’s Failure to Prevent Reporting (FTPR) offense, particularly in the context of vendor interactions and employee-third-party relations. Walden advocates for the implementation of robust compliance and fraud risk management programs, leveraging AI and machine learning to detect high-risk transactions and enhance business efficiency. He also highlights the global relevance of regulations like the UK Economic Crime and Corporate Transparency Act, stressing the necessity of robust fraud prevention measures to ensure compliance in a rapidly evolving legal landscape.

Key highlights:

  • Addressing Various Fraud Offenses Under ECCTA
  • Effective Fraud Prevention Procedures for Compliance Programs
  • Enhancing Fraud Risk Analysis in Financial Processes
  • Enhancing Fraud Detection Through Risk Assessment

Resources:

Vince Walden on LinkedIn

konaAI, a Covasant company

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

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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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AI Today in 5

AI Today in 5: August 22, 2025 The Angst Episode

Welcome to AI Today in 5, the newest addition to the Compliance Podcast Network. Each day, Tom Fox will bring you 5 stories about AI to 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 about AI.

Top AI stories include:

  • Responsible AI in action. (PeopleMatters)
  • State AI regulatory initiatives drive SB angst. (CFO Dive)
  • Balancing complexity and technology. (Financial IT)
  • AI and predictive Analytics are top compliance concerns for investment advisors. (IAA Today)
  • Is ChatGPT 5’s reception worrying? (Bloomberg)
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Compliance Tip of the Day

Compliance Tip of the Day – Using AI to Embed Your Compliance Program

Welcome to “Compliance Tip of the Day,” the podcast where we bring 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, we aim to provide you with bite-sized, actionable tips to help you stay on top of your compliance game. 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.

Today, we conclude our 5-part series on using compliance in a best practices compliance program by considering how to embed compliance into your business operations with the help of AI.

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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Blog

Using AI to Embed Compliance into Business Operations

Ed. Note: This week, we present a week-long series on the use of GenAI in a best practices compliance program. Additionally, for each blog post, I have created a one-page checklist for each article that you can use in presentations or for easier reference. Email my EA Jaja at jaja@compliancepodcastnetwork.net for a complimentary copy.

Compliance programs have long wrestled with a central challenge: how to move from “bolt-on” to “built-in.” Too often, compliance has been perceived as an overlay, a set of policies and reviews that operate parallel to business activity. The Department of Justice has repeatedly emphasized that compliance should be integrated directly into operations, not treated as an afterthought.

Generative AI offers compliance professionals a new tool to achieve this, as Elisa Farri and Gabriele Rosani argue in an HBR article How AI Can Help Managers Think Through Problems, that AI is not just a productivity enhancer but a thought partner. Instead, it is capable of helping leaders frame problems, test assumptions, and engage in structured dialogues that improve decision-making.

I aim to utilize their article to support compliance officers in leveraging AI to enhance our ability to embed compliance into business processes more effectively. Today, I conclude my five-part blog post series on using GenAI in compliance to explore how AI can assist in building compliance into the business and what it means for the future of compliance programs. I also provide five key takeaways for compliance professionals on how to do so.

1. AI as a Co-Thinking Partner for Embedding Compliance into Workflows

One of the article’s most powerful insights is the concept of “co-thinking”; AI as a partner in structured dialogue rather than just a tool for quick answers. For compliance, this is transformative. Imagine using AI not simply to draft a policy, but to help you think through how that policy should be embedded in day-to-day operations.

For instance, when designing a gifts-and-entertainment approval process, AI can walk compliance through stakeholder perspectives: What does sales need? What would regulators expect? What friction will finance raise? By simulating these perspectives, AI helps compliance professionals design workflows that are practical and embedded, rather than abstract and detached.

This approach also makes compliance more proactive. Instead of reacting to risks after violations occur, AI-enabled co-thinking allows compliance to anticipate where policies may clash with business objectives and design operational solutions upfront. The compliance lesson is to treat AI as a structured dialogue partner to design compliance that lives inside the workflow, policies, and processes that are not just documented but operationalized.

2. Enhancing Stakeholder Engagement Through AI Simulations

Embedding compliance into business operations requires more than rules; it requires buy-in. The article highlights how AI can role-play different stakeholders, challenging managers to anticipate reactions. Compliance can use this capability to stress-test initiatives before rollout.

Suppose compliance is introducing a new due diligence system for third-party onboarding. AI can simulate how procurement might respond (“slows down vendor onboarding”), how business development might object (“hurts competitiveness”), and how regulators might evaluate (“strong demonstration of risk-based management”). This multi-stakeholder dialogue allows compliance teams to refine both process design and messaging before rollout.

The implication for compliance programs is clear: embedding compliance requires deep cultural alignment. AI makes it possible to test and rehearse that alignment at scale, reducing resistance and building smoother adoption. The compliance lesson is to use AI simulations to bring stakeholder voices into the design process, ensuring compliance is not bolted on but built with empathy for business realities.

3. AI-Assisted Root Cause Analysis Strengthens Business Integration

Compliance programs are expected to conduct root cause analysis after misconduct, but too often these reviews remain siloed. AI-enabled co-thinking helps expand root cause analysis into an exercise that strengthens business operations.

For example, when analyzing repeated travel and expense violations, AI can guide compliance through structured questions: Were training gaps to blame? Were approval workflows too weak? Were sales incentives misaligned? Then, critically, AI can help map remediation back into operations—tightening finance approvals, adjusting incentive structures, and embedding compliance flags directly into expense systems.

This is not about AI making the decision. It is about AI helping compliance think through operational integration of lessons learned. Instead of merely complying with regulations by writing a report that sits on a shelf, the outcome becomes operational adjustments inside business processes. The compliance lesson (or rather, perhaps implication) is that the DOJ expects compliance programs to prevent recurrence through systemic fixes. AI co-thinking can ensure those fixes are operational, not theoretical.

4. Scaling Compliance Culture and Mindset Shifts Across the Organization

The article notes how AI can be used to coach managers through mindset shifts, helping them reflect on new behaviors and practices. Compliance can use the same approach to embed cultural expectations directly into business teams. For example, AI can be configured as a compliance coach embedded in daily tools, guiding managers through ethical dilemmas, prompting reflection during approval requests, or reinforcing company values during project planning. Instead of compliance being external and episodic, it becomes internal and continuous.

This democratizes compliance development. A frontline manager in Asia can interact with AI that reinforces compliance culture in real time, rather than waiting for annual training or sporadic compliance visits. It also gives compliance leaders data on where employees are struggling, revealing cultural gaps that can be addressed systemically.

The implication is that embedding compliance is not just about systems but about mindset. AI can make culture-building a daily, distributed activity rather than a centralized, one-time effort.

5. Ensuring Human Judgment Remains Central in AI-Enabled Compliance

Finally, while AI can enhance problem-solving and integration, the article underscores that co-thinking only works when humans stay actively engaged. Compliance cannot abdicate responsibility to machines. This has profound implications for compliance programs. AI can help frame problems, simulate stakeholders, and propose operational fixes, but it cannot weigh reputational risk, interpret regulatory expectations, or balance competing global obligations. Those decisions require human judgment.

The key is balance: AI accelerates and deepens thinking, but compliance leaders must build governance frameworks to ensure outputs are reviewed, validated, and contextualized. Embedding compliance into business operations does not mean letting AI run the show; it means letting AI augment human reasoning so that compliance becomes more practical, strategic, and defensible.

The compliance lesson, based on both the DOJ’s FCPA Resource Guide and the 2024 ECCP, is clear that compliance must be risk-based, well-resourced, and continuously improved. AI helps compliance think through integration, but humans remain accountable for ensuring it meets regulatory standards and ethical expectations.

AI as a Pathway to Embedded Compliance

The future of compliance is embedded, not bolted on. DOJ expects it. Boards demand it. Employees need it. The challenge is figuring out how to make it real. AI offers compliance professionals a powerful new tool: not as an oracle, but as a co-thinker. By helping compliance frame problems, simulate stakeholders, strengthen root cause analysis, scale cultural coaching, and reinforce human judgment, AI can accelerate the shift from compliance as oversight to compliance as an integrated business practice.

The call to action is simple: use AI not just to make compliance faster, but to make compliance inseparable from business. That is how compliance earns trust, drives culture, and meets regulatory expectations in the age of AI.

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AI Today in 5

AI Today in 5: August 21, 2025, The AI Psychosis Episode

Welcome to AI Today in 5, the newest addition to the Compliance Podcast Network. Each day, Tom Fox will bring you 5 stories about AI to 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 about AI.

Top stories include:

  • 95% of GenAI is failing. (Fortune)
  • MIT report on AI spooks investors. (IBD)
  • Is AI psychosis real? (BBC)
  • Lutnick insults the Chinese. Chinese stop buying Nvidia chips. (FT)
  • Should quants use AI? (Bloomberg)
Categories
Compliance Tip of the Day

Compliance Tip of the Day – Co-Thinking with AI

Welcome to “Compliance Tip of the Day,” the podcast where we bring 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, we aim to provide you with bite-sized, actionable tips to help you stay on top of your compliance game. 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.

Today, we continue our 5-part series on using compliance in a best practices compliance program by considering how AI can be a new approach for compliance problem-solving.

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.

Categories
Blog

Co-Thinking with AI: A New Frontier for Compliance Problem-Solving

Ed. Note: This week, we present a week-long series on the use of GenAI in a best practices compliance program. Every other day this week, I have created a one-page checklist for each article that you can use in presentations or for easier reference. However, for today’s blog post, I have made a Compliance AI Dialogue Playbook to illustrate the concepts discussed. If you would like a copy, email my EA, Jaja, at jaja@compliancepodcastnetwork.net.

Compliance officers are, at their core, problem-solvers. We wrestle with thorny questions every day: How do we implement a global gifts-and-entertainment policy across jurisdictions with vastly different cultural norms? How do we balance business pressures with anti-corruption obligations? How do we address new risks like AI itself? Traditionally, compliance officers have relied on their teams, external counsel, and regulators for perspective. But now, there is another partner available: AI as a co-thinker.

Elisa Farri and Gabriele Rosani, in their HBR article, How AI Can Help Managers Think Through Problems, argue that generative AI is not simply a productivity booster but a thought partner that can help managers frame problems, weigh trade-offs, and refine decision-making. For compliance professionals, this opens an exciting frontier. Instead of seeing AI as just a summarization or monitoring tool, we can use it to think with us about compliance challenges.

Today, we consider five key takeaways for compliance professionals, each exploring how AI can and should be trusted as a structured co-thinker in corporate compliance problem-solving.

1. AI Can Help Frame Compliance Problems More Clearly

One of the hardest parts of compliance work is problem framing. Regulators do not hand us neat checklists; instead, they give us principles, expectations, and enforcement actions. It’s up to us to translate these into workable policies and controls.

The authors highlight how AI can act as a sounding board, asking clarifying questions, offering perspectives, and reframing issues. In compliance, this is invaluable. For example, when confronting a possible books-and-records violation, you can ask AI to outline the problem from different angles: the DOJ’s perspective, the auditor’s lens, or the business unit’s operational concerns.

This “co-thinking” dialogue helps compliance officers avoid blind spots. By articulating context and criteria while AI proposes reframings or stakeholder perspectives, the problem becomes clearer. Often, clarity is half the solution.

The compliance lesson: Don’t just throw a problem at AI and expect an answer. Use it to refine the question. A well-framed compliance issue is easier to analyze, explain, and ultimately solve.

2. AI Strengthens Root Cause Analysis in Compliance Investigations

Root cause analysis is central to modern compliance. Regulators do not just want misconduct identified; they want to know why it happened and how you’ll prevent it going forward. Yet too often, root cause analysis gets bogged down in assumptions or limited perspectives.

Farri and Rosani cite managers who use AI dialogues to explore underlying causes systematically. For compliance officers, this can be a game-changer. Imagine an investigation into repeated expense-report fraud. AI can walk you through potential cultural drivers (“tone at the top,” sales pressure), structural flaws (weak approval workflows), and training gaps. It can then push back: “Are you overlooking incentives?” or “What if the issue is inadequate third-party vetting?”

By iterating through hypotheses in a structured dialogue, compliance professionals can avoid premature conclusions and dig deeper. This not only strengthens remediation but also demonstrates to regulators that the company engaged in a thorough, multi-perspective analysis.

The compliance lesson: AI co-thinking transforms root cause analysis from a static checklist into a dynamic dialogue, driving richer insights and more defensible conclusions.

3. AI Helps Anticipate Stakeholder Reactions to Compliance Decisions

Compliance isn’t just about rules; it’s about relationships. A compliance policy that looks perfect on paper can fail if stakeholders resist or misunderstand it. That’s why anticipating reactions is essential.

The article describes a communications manager who used AI to role-play stakeholder perspectives. Compliance teams can apply the same method. Suppose you’re rolling out a new third-party due diligence system. You could ask AI to simulate how sales might react (“This slows down deal velocity“), how finance might respond (“We lack resources for added checks“), and how regulators would view the process (“Demonstrates good faith risk management“).

This kind of dialogue allows compliance officers to refine messaging, anticipate objections, and design mitigation strategies before rollout. It’s essentially stakeholder mapping on steroids.

The compliance lesson: Use AI to run “compliance fire drills.” Let it act as different stakeholders, challenge your assumptions, and highlight where communication or process gaps may derail implementation. Better to hear objections from an AI simulation than from the DOJ or your workforce, after the fact.

4. AI Supports Compliance Leadership and Mindset Shifts

Compliance is not static; it evolves as risks and expectations change. One of the hardest parts of leadership is helping teams adopt new mindsets. Whether it’s embedding ESG into compliance or shifting from reactive investigations to proactive risk management, change is as much about people as it is about rules.

The authors point to managers using AI to coach teams through mindset shifts. Compliance officers can replicate this by designing AI dialogues that help teams reflect on change. For example: “Act as a compliance coach guiding a regional manager through adopting a risk-based mindset for third-party approvals.” AI can then walk the manager through scenarios, pose self-assessment questions, and suggest daily practices to internalize the change.

This turns AI into a scalable leadership development tool for compliance. It’s not replacing human mentorship but supplementing it, ensuring employees across geographies get consistent coaching.

The compliance lesson is straightforward: AI can democratize leadership development in compliance. By embedding coaching into AI assistants, compliance leaders can scale mindset change while reinforcing culture across the enterprise.

5. AI Encourages Reflective and Ethical Decision-Making

Finally, compliance is about judgment. Not every decision can be reduced to a policy or rulebook. Whether deciding how to respond to a gray-area hospitality offer or whether to self-disclose a violation, compliance officers must weigh trade-offs.

Farri and Rosani emphasize that AI, when engaged as a co-thinker, can enhance reflective decision-making. It does so by slowing us down, asking probing questions, and challenging quick assumptions. This is especially important because compliance officers are often under pressure to deliver fast answers to complex problems.

By prompting reflections such as “What risks might we be missing? What would regulators expect? What precedent are we setting? AI ensures compliance officers approach decisions with greater ethical clarity. It’s the Socratic method in digital form.

The compliance lesson: AI should not be seen as replacing compliance judgment but as sharpening it. By making space for reflection, AI helps ensure that compliance decisions are thoughtful, principled, and defensible.

From Automation to Co-Thinking

For too long, compliance has viewed AI as a back-office automation tool: summarizing, monitoring, and drafting. Farri and Rosani remind us that AI can do much more: it can think with us.

By helping frame problems, strengthening root cause analysis, anticipating stakeholder reactions, supporting mindset shifts, and fostering reflective decision-making, AI becomes not just a tool but a thought partner. For compliance officers under increasing pressure from regulators and boards, that partnership could be transformative.

The path forward is clear: stop asking “What can AI do for compliance?” and start asking “How can AI help compliance think better?”

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AI Today in 5

AI Today in 5: August 20, 2025, The In Pursuit of Super-Intelligence Episode

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 to 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 about AI.

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 Into the Weeds

Compliance into the Weeds: The Dark Side of AI in Employee Training

The award-winning Compliance into the Weeds is the only weekly podcast that takes a deep dive into a compliance-related topic, literally going into the weeds to explore a subject more fully. Looking for some hard-hitting insights on compliance? Look no further than Compliance into the Weeds! In this episode of Compliance into the Weeds, Tom Fox and Matt Kelly discuss emerging concerns surrounding AI, particularly ChatGPT, in the realm of employee training.

Their discussion centers on the potential use of AI, specifically ChatGPT’s newest ‘Agent Mode’, to administer compliance training courses on behalf of employees, which could potentially enable them to cheat. They debate the implications of this capability, touching on the historical context of cheating, the effectiveness of current training methods, and the need for new internal controls and strategies to adapt to these technological advancements. They also contemplate the future of training, potentially evolving into AI-driven bots that provide on-the-spot, micro-learning modules. The episode encourages compliance officers to thoroughly vet their training vendors to ensure measures are in place to prevent AI-enabled cheating.

Key highlights:

  • The Dark Side of AI in Compliance Training
  • AI’s Impact on Employee Training
  • AI’s Role in Training and Compliance
  • Future of AI in Corporate Training
  • Challenges and Considerations

Resources:

Matt Kelly in Radical Compliance

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A multi-award-winning podcast, Compliance into the Weeds was most recently honored as one of the Top 25 Regulatory Compliance Podcasts, a Top 10 Business Law Podcast, and a Top 12 Risk Management Podcast. Compliance into the Weeds has been conferred a Davey, Communicator, and W3 Awards for podcast excellence.