Artificial Intelligence and Consumer Fraud:
Risks, Responses, and Policy Solutions
Date & Time
Sept. 17, 2025 | 8:30am – 3pm EDT
Location
Jack Morton Auditorium Media and Public Affairs Building
Admission
Free to attend both days—RSVP required.
Aurelien Portuese
Aurelien Portuese is Research Professor and Founding Director of the Competition & Innovation Lab at George Washington University and Senior Consultant at Compass Lexecon. An expert in antitrust, innovation, and digital markets, he advises regulators worldwide on competition, AI, and consumer protection. He is the author of Algorithmic Antitrust and frequently publishes and speaks on the intersection of technology, economic policy, and fraud prevention.
Aurelien Portuese
Aurelien Portuese is Research Professor and Founding Director of the Competition & Innovation Lab at George Washington University and Senior Consultant at Compass Lexecon. An expert in antitrust, innovation, and digital markets, he advises regulators worldwide on competition, AI, and consumer protection. He is the author of Algorithmic Antitrust and frequently publishes and speaks on the intersection of technology, economic policy, and fraud prevention.
John Breyault
John Breyault is Vice President of Public Policy at the National Consumers League, advocating for stronger consumer protections on fraud, technology, and telecommunications. He manages NCL’s Fraud Center, coordinates the Alliance Against Fraud, and serves as Research Director for TRAC, representing residential consumers in digital and IP-enabled communications. John has advised federal agencies, including the FCC, on consumer protection and frequently speaks on technology, fraud prevention, and policy solutions.
John Breyault
John Breyault is Vice President of Public Policy at the National Consumers League, advocating for stronger consumer protections on fraud, technology, and telecommunications. He manages NCL’s Fraud Center, coordinates the Alliance Against Fraud, and serves as Research Director for TRAC, representing residential consumers in digital and IP-enabled communications. John has advised federal agencies, including the FCC, on consumer protection and frequently speaks on technology, fraud prevention, and policy solutions.
Marc Rotenberg
Marc Rotenberg is the Executive Director and Founder of the Center for AI and Digital Policy. A leading expert in data protection, AI policy, and open government, he helped draft the Universal Guidelines for AI and has served on numerous international advisory panels, including the OECD AI Group of Experts. Marc teaches privacy law and the GDPR at Georgetown Law and has testified before Congress, the European Parliament, and other global bodies.
Marc Rotenberg
Marc Rotenberg is the Executive Director and Founder of the Center for AI and Digital Policy. A leading expert in data protection, AI policy, and open government, he helped draft the Universal Guidelines for AI and has served on numerous international advisory panels, including the OECD AI Group of Experts. Marc teaches privacy law and the GDPR at Georgetown Law and has testified before Congress, the European Parliament, and other global bodies.
Grace Gedye
Grace Gedye is a Policy Analyst at Consumer Reports, where she focuses on artificial intelligence and related issues, including algorithmic bias, accuracy, safety, impersonation, and independent testing. Prior to joining CR, she reported on economic and tech policy for CalMatters, a nonprofit news organization in California, covering topics from tax proposals to social media regulation. She previously worked as an editor and writer at the Washington Monthly, writing on technology, antitrust, and other policy issues. Grace holds a B.A. in politics from Pomona College.
Grace Gedye
Grace Gedye is a Policy Analyst at Consumer Reports, where she focuses on artificial intelligence and related issues, including algorithmic bias, accuracy, safety, impersonation, and independent testing. Prior to joining CR, she reported on economic and tech policy for CalMatters, a nonprofit news organization in California, covering topics from tax proposals to social media regulation. She previously worked as an editor and writer at the Washington Monthly, writing on technology, antitrust, and other policy issues. Grace holds a B.A. in politics from Pomona College.
Lana Swartz
Lana Swartz
Ben Winters
Ben Winters
Abigail Bishop
Abigail Bishop
Mike Beirne
Mike Beirne is the Director of Regulatory Affairs at CTIA, where he leads regulatory strategy and represents the organization before federal and state policymakers. He has extensive experience in telecommunications policy, regulatory compliance, and industry advocacy, having held prior roles at Meta, the US Department of Commerce NTIA, and the International Telecommunication Union. Mike’s work focuses on navigating complex policy issues to advance the telecommunications industry.
Mike Beirne
Mike Beirne is the Director of Regulatory Affairs at CTIA, where he leads regulatory strategy and represents the organization before federal and state policymakers. He has extensive experience in telecommunications policy, regulatory compliance, and industry advocacy, having held prior roles at Meta, the US Department of Commerce NTIA, and the International Telecommunication Union. Mike’s work focuses on navigating complex policy issues to advance the telecommunications industry.
Fernando Lopez
Fernando Lopez
Nick Rossman
Nick Rossman
Joseph Dunne
Joseph Dunne
Kate Griffin
Kate Griffin
Jenni Katzman
Jenni Katzman
Katherine White
Katherine White
NCL statement on Steven Bradbury committee vote