Remove Branding Remove Ethics Remove Exercises Remove Privacy
article thumbnail

[Checklist] AI compliance for PR pros

Landis PR

AI compliance refers to adhering to a set of guidelines, regulations and ethical standards in the development, deployment and usage of AI technologies. Compliance involves safeguarding user privacy, avoiding biases and maintaining data security. Protecting data privacy : PR pros often handle sensitive client information.

Privacy 64
article thumbnail

Integrating Clubhouse in and out of the classroom

Karen Freberg

In social media, there is always the new shiny tool, app, or brand that captures the attention of marketing professionals all over the world. Also, privacy (ex. We all thrive on getting the latest, greatest, and exciting new app to analyze and play around with. Now, if that app is exclusive, that heightens the excitement even more!

Groups 96
Insiders

Sign Up for our Newsletter

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

Trending Sources

article thumbnail

Conducting historical interviews in a transparent age

PR Conversations

This is a critical aspect of scholarship, but is commonly lacking in practice, particularly within public relations where crowd-sourcing exercises and publicity-oriented surveys may be viewed unproblematically. Ethical challenges arise as Saunders et al (2015) contend, from accessibility online of private as well as public information.

article thumbnail

Conducting historical interviews in a transparent age

PR Conversations

This is a critical aspect of scholarship, but is commonly lacking in practice, particularly within public relations where crowd-sourcing exercises and publicity-oriented surveys may be viewed unproblematically. Ethical challenges arise, as Saunders et al (2015) contend, from accessibility online of private as well as public information.

article thumbnail

Conducting historical interviews in a transparent age

PR Conversations

This is a critical aspect of scholarship, but is commonly lacking in practice, particularly within public relations where crowd-sourcing exercises and publicity-oriented surveys may be viewed unproblematically. Ethical challenges arise, as Saunders et al (2015) contend, from accessibility online of private as well as public information.