logo
#

Latest news with #DanAriely

8 WAYS TO PROTECT YOUR REPUTATION WHEN TARGETED BY DISINFORMATION
8 WAYS TO PROTECT YOUR REPUTATION WHEN TARGETED BY DISINFORMATION

Forbes

time06-07-2025

  • Politics
  • Forbes

8 WAYS TO PROTECT YOUR REPUTATION WHEN TARGETED BY DISINFORMATION

Most Americans lie at least one to four times each day research shows, and about 60% of people 18 and older can't have a conversation without lying every ten minutes. Disinformation media and abstract screen. And that is just in personal life. In business and politics, we all know that lying, exaggerating, bluffing, and disinformation campaigns are common. Sometimes disinformation campaigns are even seen as good business; they certainly can be effective and compelling. Duke professor Dan Ariely reports that 'creative personalities tended to cheat more than less creative individuals.'Lies are more blatant, more easily believed and far more easily weaponized than ever before While much lying is benign, and centered around not wanting to disappoint, in today's viral social media world, lies are more blatant, more easily believed and far more easily weaponized. Disinformation — the purposeful bending of, or negating, the truth — is used to destroy reputations, shatter trust, change political regimes, win at all costs, and muddy our distinctions between what is real and true, and what is blatantly false and biased. Disinformation has proven difficult to define, understand, and measure, let alone we know that disinformation works. The more times a lie is repeated, the more credible it becomes, until it is accepted as the truth. While that may be mildly acceptable in advertising, or from influencers, as a standard for building a life or a company, it often destroys the fabric of trust that binds us. As PwC states: 'Disinformation attacks have arrived in the corporate sector.' So, what can corporate or individual leaders do to protect themselves from the disinformation fallout? Grin and bear the reputational disinformation attack Lawyers often counsel smaller clients in these situations to ignore the falsities, to hunker down and keep going without exacerbating the situation or going bankrupt. In other words, bear the slings and arrows in order to come out bloody but alive. Or sue Some huge muliti-nationals, on the other hand, choose to file civil lawsuits against alleged perpetrators, and in some situations this works. For example, who even remembers powerful rumors alleging a link between Proctor & Gamble's logo and Satanism? P&G put the issue to bed, finally, by suing and winning a jury award of almost $20 million in 2007, after fighting the allegations since the early 1980's. Concept of the confrontation of opinions on social networks, with two men confronting their ideas ... More while screaming into a megaphone. In fact, the response to disinformation, both personal and corporate, can make or break a reputation and a leader. Here are 8 lessons to consider the next time you or your company are targeted with a disinformation campaign:

NBC Announces the Cancellation of Three Shows
NBC Announces the Cancellation of Three Shows

Yahoo

time10-05-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Yahoo

NBC Announces the Cancellation of Three Shows

In an effort to make room in its schedule for NBA programming, NBC announced the cancellation of three different shows on Friday. According to reports from Deadline, NBC has made the decision to cancel Suits: LA, Lopez vs. Lopez, and The Irrational. The network announced all of the decisions on Friday afternoon. Suits: LA was a high-profile spinoff of the long-running USA Network series Suits which was on the air for nine seasons from 2011 to 2019. Despite high expectations and a star-studded cast that included several returning characters from the original series, the spinoff had worse-than-anticipated numbers and has been canceled after just one season. Lopez vs. Lopez is an American sitcom created by George Lopez that follows a dysfunctional family highlighted by a father and daughter reconnecting after being estranged for several years. While the show ran for three seasons on NBC, it will not get a fourth. The Irrational is a crime drama that is loosely based on the life of Dan Ariely, a behavioral economist and professor at Duke University, and his book Predictably Irrational: The Hidden Forces That Shape Our Decisions. In the show, the protagonist uses his expertise to help the police and the FBI solve high-stakes cases. Though it was renewed for a second season, it has been canceled after two seasons. After winning a bid over the summer, NBC is set to broadcast NBA basketball once again starting with the 2025-26 season, marking the return of the network's coverage of the league. However, with more basketball games coming to the show's schedule, the network obviously had to make room in its lineup, and these shows were all casualties of that process.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store