
Liability in Agentic Commerce: Who Takes the Risk? [Live Event]
AI agents will soon be able to buy things for you. They can decide what to purchase, when to purchase it, and how. But here’s the problem:
No one really knows who’s responsible when they get it wrong.
In traditional commerce, liability is relatively clear. In agentic commerce, it’s not.
Does responsibility sit with the user who gave the instruction?
The company that built the agent?
The payment provider that processed the transaction?
Or the merchant that fulfilled it?
In this session, we bring together product and legal perspectives to unpack one of the biggest unanswered questions in AI today.
Featuring:
- Przemek Praszczalek (ex-Mastercard), on how payments are evolving for agent-driven transactions
- Ronald Kogens (Partner at MME), on liability, consent, and the limits of existing legal frameworks
If you’re building or thinking about agentic commerce, this is a conversation you can’t ignore.
💡 Why Dock Labs is Organizing This Event
At Dock Labs, our conversations with clients exploring AI agents and agentic commerce have made one thing clear: there’s growing excitement about autonomous transactions, but also major uncertainty around trust, accountability, and liability.
As organizations prepare for a future where AI agents can act on behalf of people and businesses, a key question keeps emerging: how do you verify who an agent represents, what it’s authorized to do, and whether that authorization can be trusted?
That’s why we’re hosting this session, to bring together product and legal perspectives on one of the biggest unanswered questions in AI, and explore what trustworthy agentic commerce might actually require as it moves from experimentation to reality.
📅 Don’t Miss Out
June 10th at 9 am California | 5 pm London
Location: Online