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When, Not if: Protecting Your Corporate Reputation In A Data Breach

By Fiona Parker & Alec Peck: Data breaches are now so common that it’s hard to keep up. In any given week there are reports of attacks across all sectors and geographies.  At the time of writing the Yahoo! data breach could potentially involve up to a mind boggling 1 billion users. By the time […]


Is Trump’s Twitter Changing the Presidency?

Brian Feldman writes: Among myriad concerns surrounding a Donald Trump presidency, somewhere right in the center of the list — maybe just slightly closer to the bottom than the top in terms of importance — is his relation to the press. Or more accurately: the way in which he uses it. Depending on whom you […]


Taking Out the Trash and 3 Other Ways to Handle February TV “Sweeps”

[by Howard Fencl, Hennes Communications] Close on the heels of the New Year is the February Nielsen TV “sweeps” period – one of the ratings periods guaranteed to bring out the most salacious, over-the-top TV news special reports and sweeps series. The February sweeps period runs Feb 2 – March 1. Mark your calendars. It’s […]


Why You Should be Worried About Fake News – And How You Can Fight It

Molly Strong writes: While fake content has circulated in tabloids and on the internet for years, the 2016 election has given us a reason to take it seriously. Stories about the Clintons selling weapons to ISIS and Trump winning the popular vote (he didn’t) spread like wildfire, and in some cases outperformed real news. The […]


‘How Propaganda Works’ Is a Timely Reminder for a Post-Truth Age

Michiko Kakutani reviews ‘How Propaganda Works’: n “Mein Kampf,” Hitler argued that effective propaganda appeals “to the feelings of the public rather than to their reasoning ability”; relies on “stereotyped formulas,” repeated over and over again, to drum ideas into the minds of the masses; and uses simple “love or hate, right or wrong” formulations […]


Lessons From 2016 for the News Media, as the Ground Shifts

From Jim Rutenberg: Starting a weekly column about the nexus between media, technology, culture and politics in the middle of the 2016 presidential campaign was like parachuting into a hail of machine-gun crossfire. Dense smoke was everywhere as the candidates and their supporters unloaded on one another and, frequently, the news media, which more than […]


Study: Trump Benefited From ‘Overwhelmingly Negative’ Tone Of Election News Coverage

From Forbes.com: Depending on who you believe, Donald Trump won the election because of Russian hackers, last-minute FBI announcements, fake news, or because Hillary Clinton was a bad candidate. A new study from the Harvard Kennedy School pins the blame on the news media—specifically the “overwhelmingly negative” tone of news coverage and the “extremely light” coverage […]


How Police Are Watching You on Social Media

From The Atlantic CityLab: In October, the ACLU released emails showing that a social media monitoring company called Geofeedia had tracked the accounts of Black Lives Matter protesters for law enforcement clients. The revelations of social media spying made headlines and led Twitter, Facebook, and Instagram to cut off Geofeedia’s access to bulk user data (which in […]


Reputation Management, Fake News and How to Deal With the Constantly Changing Rules

[By Thom Fladung, Hennes Communications] Remember the good old days – like, oh a few months ago – when one of the major threats to reputation was getting caught up in critical news coverage or disparaging social media chatter? That was then. This is now: Try fighting to save that reputation when you’re under attack from […]


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