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CFPB Joins Federal and State Agencies in Coordinated Statements on Tech & Enforcement

Pictured, in front row, left to right are Family Trust Federal Credit Union representatives Lauren Jones, chief operating officer and Susan Vogel, chief financial officer; Alan Mitchell, Greenville City Council; U.S. Representative William Timmons; and Stanley Jackson, chief retail officer, Family Trust Federal Credit Union. Back row, l. to r. are Family Trust Federal Credit Union’s Ryan Harvey, president and CEO, and Ron Miller, chief lending officer, and Carolinas Credit Union League representative Nathan Lane.

Today, federal and state agencies, including the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB), released agency-specific action statements on tech capacity. These statements reflect concrete actions to increase tech capacity, including actively hiring technologists – which will help enforce the laws on the book and design remedies that work for consumers, workers, small businesses, and others in the digital era.

Amid a rapidly evolving tech ecosystem – including the wave of attention on generative AI – CFPB technologists work in interdisciplinary teams across the Bureau to help ensure that the rights of consumers are not being violated. This includes helping to identify emerging technology developments, spot potential issues, and where appropriate, help enforce the law and develop lasting remedies.

\”From cracking down on data abuses and shoddy AI to tracking Big Tech’s movement into financial services, technology is fundamental to the CFPB’s work,” said CFPB Director Rohit Chopra. “Our technologists help the agency enforce existing laws and track emerging risks to consumers to ensure that American families are protected through whatever technological changes the market encounters.”

Read the statement from CFPB Director Chopra and Chief Technologist Erie Meyer.

Read the Federal Trade Commission’s statement.

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