Understanding the legal landscape is the foundation of any defensible AI governance strategy. These briefings translate complex statutory obligations into plain-language guidance for MDs, CCOs, and Risk Managers who need clarity — not legal jargon.
The regulatory environment for financial services has never moved faster. ASIC's "Year of Accountability" is not a future event — it is happening now, and it is targeting automated decision-making, AI-assisted advice, and the supervisory frameworks meant to govern them. These resources exist so that your leadership team is informed, your compliance posture is defensible, and your firm is never caught off-guard.
The Privacy Act amendments and ASIC's ADM Transparency expectations converge at the end of 2026. AFSL holders who have not documented their AI use, assigned accountability, and built Human-in-the-Loop protocols risk enforcement action, licence conditions, and reputational damage. The resources below are your starting point — not a destination.
Understanding the legal landscape is the foundation of any defensible AI governance strategy. These briefings translate complex statutory obligations into plain-language guidance for MDs, CCOs, and Risk Managers who need clarity — not legal jargon.
ASIC's November 2025 civil penalty proceedings against Interprac Financial Planning are the clearest signal yet of how regulators will treat inadequate AI supervision. This brief analyses the three core failures and what they mean for your firm today.
Read the Case Study → Legislation · AFSLSection 912 is the statutory backbone of every AFSL obligation. This explainer maps each s912A general obligation directly to the realities of AI deployment — from robo-advice engines to automated complaint handling.
Read the Explainer → Legislation · Directors' DutiesTechnology neutral and unforgiving. This guide shows how s912A and the Corporations Act directors' duty provisions apply equally to your algorithms and your advisors — and where personal liability begins.
Read the Guide → Legislation · Data GovernanceThe Proper Use provisions are increasingly relevant as AI systems consume vast training datasets. This brief explains how ss182–183 create personal liability risk for directors who permit misuse of client data to power AI models.
Read the Brief → Prudential Standard · Operational RiskAPRA's CPS 230 standard introduces material operational risk obligations that extend to third-party AI providers, model failures, and technology outages. Understand your obligations before your next audit cycle.
Read the Briefing →The convergence of ASIC enforcement, Privacy Act reform, and APRA operational risk standards means that 2026 is not a single deadline — it is a sequence of obligations that require action now. Here is what has happened and what is coming.
ASIC commenced Federal Court proceedings over the alleged failure to supervise authorised representatives who directed $677 million of client superannuation into collapsed funds. The case signals that manual oversight of AI-assisted advice is legally insufficient.
ASIC published updated guidance stating that firms using automated decision-making must be able to demonstrate real-time, data-driven supervision of AI systems — not periodic reviews or template-based audits.
Firms that begin governance documentation, HITL protocol design, and ADM inventories in Q3 will have a completed framework before the December deadline. Firms that wait until Q4 risk producing inadequate documentation under pressure.
Privacy Act amendments requiring disclosure of automated decision-making under APP 1.7 come into full effect. ASIC will be in a position to act against firms that cannot demonstrate documented, operational AI governance.
The firms that survive regulatory scrutiny in 2026 will not be those with the most sophisticated AI. They will be the ones who built governance before the algorithm went live — not after the enforcement notice arrived. Every resource on this page exists to help you become the former.
— Lead AI GRC Strategist, Liberate Consulting
These briefings are written for principals, CCOs, and Risk Managers — not lawyers. They are designed to be read in under fifteen minutes, shared with your Board, and used as the basis for a structured conversation with your compliance team.
Start with the Interprac Warning if you need to understand the enforcement risk landscape. Move to the s912A briefing if you need to map your statutory obligations to your AI systems. Use the Directors' Duties guide to understand where personal liability begins — and where your governance documentation becomes your defence.
If you have already read the briefings and need to move from understanding to action, the AI Readiness Scorecard is your next step. It gives you a structured assessment of your current posture in under an hour — and a prioritised gap report your team can act on immediately.
Knowledge is necessary — but it is not sufficient. Liberate Consulting's structured engagements take you from understanding your obligations to having documented, Board-ready AI governance before the December 2026 deadline.
