All posts tagged: reputation

Can OpenAI’s ‘Master of Disaster’ Fix AI’s Reputation Crisis?

Can OpenAI’s ‘Master of Disaster’ Fix AI’s Reputation Crisis?

Three months ago, OpenAI cofounder Greg Brockman told me his concerns about a mounting public relations crisis facing artificial intelligence companies: Despite the popularity of tools like ChatGPT, an increasingly large share of the population said they viewed AI negatively. Since then, the backlash has only intensified. College commencement speakers are now getting booed for talking about AI in optimistic terms. Last month, someone threw a Molotov cocktail at OpenAI CEO Sam Altman’s San Francisco home and wrote a manifesto advocating for crimes against AI executives. No one has more to lose from this reputation crisis than OpenAI. The person tasked with trying to fix it is Chris Lehane, OpenAI’s chief of global affairs and a veteran political operative. I sat down with him this week to discuss what I’d argue are his two biggest challenges yet: convincing the world to embrace OpenAI’s technology, while at the same time persuading lawmakers to adopt regulations that won’t hamper the company’s growth. Lehane views these goals as one in the same. “When I was in the White …

Can Drake’s ‘Iceman’ Chart Success Mend His Reputation?

Can Drake’s ‘Iceman’ Chart Success Mend His Reputation?

Drake is looking to chart dominance to turn the page on one of the most infamous rap battles in music history. Or at least, that’s how it appears as the superstar elected to release three albums at once on Friday for his his first new solo records since Kendrick Lamar’s “Not Like Us” took over the world in 2024. Indeed, the rapper seems poised to overwhelm the charts in the days ahead with Iceman, Maid of Honour and Habibti, as the albums are taking over the streaming services and the conversation across social media. Already, some onlookers are speculating where the new records will debut on the Billboard charts next week, and if he can achieve the rare feat of taking the top three slots on Billboard’s album chart, an achievement only Michael Jackson had pulled of after his death in 2009.  But does flexing your commercial output pave over one of the most polarizing moments a rapper has faced in recent memory? That’s a much more complicated question. In some ways, one can argue …

Sarah Ferguson issued warning over ‘six-figure deal’ to ‘save reputation’ | Royal | News

Sarah Ferguson issued warning over ‘six-figure deal’ to ‘save reputation’ | Royal | News

Sarah Ferguson has kept a low profile in recent months (Image: Chris Day/The Commercial Appeal / USA TODAY NETWORK via Imagn Images) Sarah Ferguson is reportedly receiving numerous offers for a tell-all interview, but a PR expert suggests such a decision could prove counterproductive. According to celebrity PR specialist Kayley Cornelius, the 66-year-old ought to carefully consider any financial incentive to prevent a repeat of the backlash that followed her ex-husband Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor’s Newsnight interview. The former Duchess of York has maintained a low profile since alleged emails between her and convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein were mentioned in the Epstein files. She was spotted in Austria on 16 April for the first time in seven months and is now believed to be consulting friends regarding her next course of action. Sarah is understood to have received multiple opportunities to present her side of the story but has refused, notwithstanding the prospect of a six-figure payment. The PR expert cautions that accepting such an offer could prove detrimental in the long run – as many …

Fight Club deserves a better reputation – it’s not just angry incels who love it

Fight Club deserves a better reputation – it’s not just angry incels who love it

Get the latest entertainment news, reviews and star-studded interviews with our Independent Culture email Get the latest entertainment news with our free Culture newsletter Get the latest entertainment news with our free Culture newsletter The first rule of Fight Club (1999) is that its fans talk about it constantly. They talk in public places, extolling the film’s edgy virtues to anyone within earshot, and they talk on online forums with the blinds tightly shut. Possibly, they talk about it more today – with more passion and excitement – than they did when the movie was released more than a quarter of a century ago. One can’t help but wonder whether this is a good thing or not. Still, if you can’t beat them, join them – let’s say a few words about David Fincher’s Fight Club. It’s a film that lends itself to different readings. It tests and teases the viewer much as its anti-hero, Tyler Durden, tests its unnamed sad-sack hero. Ed Norton plays the white-collar wage-slave who measures his sorry existence with a …

EU Parliament’s reputation at stake in access debate, new anti-fraud chief says – POLITICO

EU Parliament’s reputation at stake in access debate, new anti-fraud chief says – POLITICO

Klement’s push for clarity over the scope of OLAF’s access comes ahead of an anticipated EU review later this year of rules governing the watchdog’s work, part of a broader revamp aimed at improving fraud prevention in Europe. It comes amid wider scrutiny of how EU institutions handle allegations of corruption and misconduct. The issue came into sharp focus during the 2022 corruption scandal known as Qatargate, a Belgian probe into alleged attempts by Qatar and Morocco to influence decision-making in the Parliament. OLAF investigators complained at the time of being blocked from accessing lawmakers’ offices and laptops. EU institutions have a “moral obligation” to “embrace transparency,” Klement wrote in OLAF’s annual report for 2025, released Monday. The body concluded eight cases last year involving Parliament staff members, the report said. “We don’t have any problems with most of [the EU institutions]. With most of them we cooperate without any issues,” Klement told POLITICO. But it’s debatable whether the agreements OLAF has with certain institutions are “enough as a legal basis for the cooperation,” he …

The House | Can The Building Safety Regulator Cast Off Its ‘Bottleneck’ Reputation?

The House | Can The Building Safety Regulator Cast Off Its ‘Bottleneck’ Reputation?

Former London Fire Commissioner Lord Roe is said to have made significant improvements to the way the Building Safety Regulator works (Collage by Antonello Sticca) 8 min read57 min The Building Safety Regulator is under new leadership. Will it succeed in fixing a broken system? Noah Vickers reports England’s Building Safety Regulator did not get off to the best of starts. Created under the last government’s Building Safety Act of 2022, the BSR was designed to prevent a tragedy like the Grenfell Tower fire from ever happening again. As well as overseeing the remediation of existing buildings, all new-build developments which qualify as ‘higher-risk’ at the planning stage are referred to the regulator for approval, and if they fail to pass muster, are sent back for changes to be made. The definition of ‘higher-risk’ means any block of flats taller than 18 metres, or seven storeys, comes under the BSR’s purview. But soon after the regulator’s establishment, it quickly struggled with the volume of applications it was receiving, and delays mounted …

Crying during a conflict damages your opponent’s reputation at a cost to your own

Crying during a conflict damages your opponent’s reputation at a cost to your own

In interpersonal conflicts, staying calm tends to protect your reputation, while crying damages the reputation of your opponent alongside your own. This points to a social tradeoff where keeping your cool helps you look good, but shedding tears is more effective if you want to make the other person look bad. These findings were recently published in the journal Evolution and Human Behavior. Conflict between people is a naturally emotional process. When humans face disputes with colleagues, friends, or romantic partners, they often express sadness or anger to navigate the situation. While past scientific work has focused on how expressing emotions affects the person showing them, less is known about how these emotional responses impact the other person involved in the dispute. Scientists wanted to examine the reputational consequences of remaining calm compared to expressing active emotions like crying or yelling. They aimed to understand whether different emotional responses create different social tradeoffs for both the person expressing the emotion and the person receiving it. “Current emotion research focuses extensively on expressive emotions i.e. crying …

Why Is the New York Times Laundering the Reputation of a Sleazy AI Startup That’s Selling GLP-1s via a Dishonest Dumpster Fire of Fake Doctors, Phony Before-and-After Pictures, a Warning From the FDA, and Other Glaring Red Flags?

Why Is the New York Times Laundering the Reputation of a Sleazy AI Startup That’s Selling GLP-1s via a Dishonest Dumpster Fire of Fake Doctors, Phony Before-and-After Pictures, a Warning From the FDA, and Other Glaring Red Flags?

Sign up to see the future, today Can’t-miss innovations from the bleeding edge of science and tech On Thursday, the New York Times published a glowing profile of a company called Medvi. The basic premise of the piece is that a single guy named Matthew Gallagher had used AI to rapidly build a pharmaceutical enterprise that’s on track to do nearly $2 billion in sales this year, while hiring only a skeleton crew of humans to operate the vast AI-powered venture. According to the NYT, it’s a stunning achievement that heralds a new era of business; OpenAI CEO Sam Altman, who predicted the rise of this kind of company back in 2024, told the newspaper that he’d “like to meet the guy” behind the project. “A $1.8 billion company with just two employees?” the NYT rhapsodized. “In the age of AI, it’s increasingly possible.” The NYT‘s tech coverage is generally pretty solid. But the framing of its story, and what it left out, left us pretty stunned. That’s because back in May of last year, we ran …

The reputation of troubled YC startup Delve has gotten even worse

The reputation of troubled YC startup Delve has gotten even worse

The controversy surrounding compliance startup Delve has gone from bad to worse this week. Among the fresh allegations from the anonymous whistleblower known as DeepDelver is the claim that Delve allegedly took an open source tool and passed it off as its own work without proper license attribution to or monetary agreement with the original developer. The story goes that the Delve team pitched a no-code tool it called Pathways to a prospect. That prospect would later become the whistleblower DeepDelver. DeepDelver recognized that Pathways looked a lot like Sim.ai’s open source agent-building product called SimStudio and asked Delve if it was based on SimStudio. The Delve folks said they built it themselves, the whistleblower contends. DeepDelver then presented alleged evidence that this tool was actually a fork — a modified copy — of SimStudio, changed just enough to be passed off as Delve’s own. If that proves true, it would be a violation of the Apache software license, which requires the original developer be credited. DeepDelver calls this “stealing intellectual property,” which is a …

Tesla dead last in Germany in Nordic reputation study

Tesla dead last in Germany in Nordic reputation study

Tesla has ranked last place in a survey of brand reputation in Europe’s largest car market Germany, with a massive year-over-year collapse leaving it behind several other companies with already-poor reputations. It ranked poorly in Nordic countries as well. The “Reputation&Trust 2025” study, by Finnish company Reputation and Trust Analytics, ranks Tesla in absolute last place out of 30 surveyed companies in Germany, with a reputation score of 2.48 on a scale of 1 to 5. Any score under 2.5 is considered “very bad.” The survey ranks companies based on eight separate factors, including governance, financial performance, leadership, innovation, dialogue, products & services, workplace, and responsibility. In the yearly survey, brands tend to shift reputation some amount from year to year, but usually don’t change that much – changing perhaps a tenth of a point or less. Advertisement – scroll for more content But Tesla’s reputation tanked year-over-year, dropping by a whopping -0.77 points. This put it from a middle-of-the-pack 3.25 score to its pack-trailing 2.48 for this year. Tesla did worse than other companies …