Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight
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Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight
Social marketing, PR insight & thought leadership - from The PR Coach
Curated by Jeff Domansky
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FTC busts ADT for using bloggers to lie to you. The punishment is excellent | Andy Sernovitz

FTC busts ADT for using bloggers to lie to you. The punishment is excellent | Andy Sernovitz | Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight | Scoop.it

The FTC announced on Thursday that it has caught ADT paying bloggers for endorsements (on blogs as well as national TV/radio) and not disclosing it.


Folks, the rules and the law on social media ethics are clear, as I’ve been sharing for years.More here.


In addition to ending the program, ADT will now be required to get a signed confirmation that a blogger has reviewed and understands their disclosure requirements — from every blogger they work with, for the next 20 years.


How awesome of a punishment is that?

Jeff Domansky's insight:

The FTC gets serious about enforcing social media ethics and disclosure.

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Has PR Become a ‘Lightning Rod of Mistrust’?

Does the public relations industry have a trust and reputation issue? Lord Bell, head of Bell Pottinger, thinks so, saying that PR has become a lightning rod of mistrust.

 

...Lord Bell sees “no solution to [the] issue,” of public relations’ reputation challenges, he tells The Holmes Report’s Arun Sudhaman, believing that “We [have] become the lightning rod for that mistrust. It is something we have to learn to live with. That makes us an easy target for the media.”

 

Lord Bell would know. As we have pointed out in this blog and in other forums, he and his firm have a way of attracting unwanted attention. Last March, PRSA wrote in The London Evening Standard that Lord Bell’s assertion that “everyone is entitled to representation so long as it does not involve doing anything illegal” should be placed in further context — that a public relations professional’s work also must not involve doing anything unethical....

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Looking behind the veil of Wikipedia, and who is pulling the levers | David E Henderson

Looking behind the veil of Wikipedia, and who is pulling the levers | David E Henderson | Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight | Scoop.it

At the other end of the credibility scale from Encyclopedia Britannica is Wikipedia.org, which apparently has never had editors but rather administrators with enough latitude on their own for personal bias, anger, ignorance and lack of knowledge to influence decisions over what appears and what does not.

 

Worse yet, the administrators for Wikipedia.org have no journalistic or editorial training! But, they are the decision-makers for information that goes online that we – you and I – are supposed to assume is accurate. Are we being conned?...

 

[Cautionary post about trusting Wikipedia - JD]

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