In this gripping conversation about the underbelly of social media outlets' unethical non-disclosures and the larger societal and PR implications, University of Tennessee Public Relations Professor Dr. Candace White discusses her latest published paper in the December 2020 edition of Public Relations Review (co-authored by UT alumnus and Clemson University faculty Brandon Boatwright), "Social media ethics in the data economy: Issues of social responsibility for using Facebook for public relations."
Topics:
journalism,
Facebook,
PRSA,
University of Tennessee,
twitter,
public relations,
kelly fletcher,
mary beth west,
#MsInterPReted,
PRCA,
PRethics,
ethics,
data,
Fletcher PR,
Candace White,
UT,
CCI,
Dorsey,
Biden/Harris,
code of ethics,
consumer protection,
Trump,
Zuckerberg,
congress,
privacy,
privacypolicy,
consumer,
regulation
Topics:
Fletcher,
PRSA,
reputation,
PR,
public relations,
kelly fletcher,
mary beth west,
PR Diversity,
#MsInterPReted,
inclusion,
George Floyd,
Reputation Dr.,
workplace,
diversity action alliance,
Inaction,
mike paul,
race,
DEI,
PRSA Foundation
PRSA (Public Relations Society of America) released its new social media policy this week with the hopes that it will offer a unified voice to govern the organization's social media efforts. The entire world is buzzing over the use of social media these days, from organizing protests in Egypt to what Ashton Kutcher had for lunch.
Topics:
Scott Stratten,
UnMarketing,
engage,
PRSA,
know your audience,
twitter,
Social Media