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In: Indian Journal of Law and Legal Research, Band VI Issue IV
SSRN
In: The Progressive, Band 29, S. 14-17
ISSN: 0033-0736
In: Philosophy Reseach
In: Nauka - rastudent.ru., Band 25
This article discusses the "fundamental onto-epistemological deception " in terms of changes in the state of society in all historical times and reveals his "place" a finding in terms of ontology. It is concluded that "fundamental onto-epistemological deception" "localized" in the Heideggerian "open" between being and what is. The article gives a classification of phenomena, which are summarized under the name of "fundamental onto-epistemological deception" and the criterion of this generalization. Attention is drawn to the socio-philosophical, existential meaning of the concept "simulacrum." Fundamental onto-epistemological deception is revealed as a different sort of human waste from reality, from mirages, deterministic physical laws to simulacra whose absorption as a "spiritual food" takes away the meaning of life and deprives a person of his own "I". During the presentation it shows that the fundamental onto-epistemological deception - is not a phenomenon of the mystical order, as a consequence of free will, which manifests itself, including in the "optics" of perception and its setting. Attention is paid to knowledge as a natural human need and the search for his "I".
Are we who we appear to be? : narratives of identication -- Images and signs -- Registering names : offices of record -- Marks on skin -- Nature's way : the color of things -- Letters and their bearers -- Certificates and appearances : doubling the person -- Major apparatuses
In: Journal of service research, Band 27, Heft 4, S. 636-652
ISSN: 1552-7379
Some retailers encourage consumers to mention the names of frontline service employees when writing online reviews. As a result, although most consumers do not pay attention to frontline service employees' names during consumption, they often see them in online reviews. The effect of this asymmetry on review persuasiveness is still unknown. This research examines the impact of mentioning frontline service employee names in online reviews on readers' likelihood of being persuaded by them. The results of one secondary data analysis and four online experiments from China demonstrate that readers are less persuaded by positive online reviews mentioning (vs. not mentioning) frontline service employee names, and perceived deception mediates this negative effect. In addition, the level of required service expertise, occurrence frequency, and review valence moderate this negative effect. For services that require a high level of expertise, when the occurrence frequency of positive reviews mentioning frontline service employee names is low, and when the reviews are negative, the aforementioned negative effect diminishes. Our study offers a new direction for name research and identifies a new factor that influences online review persuasiveness. Our findings provide valuable managerial insights into online review management strategies in the Chinese context.
"Deception and Truth-Telling in the American Legal System Law has a strangely complicated relationship to deception. Though it sometimes takes a hard line on behalf of truth - "the truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth," - competing values often cause law to look the other way. How and why is lying alternately accepted, condemned, or prosecuted? What are the government's interests in allowing or disallowing lying? Law and Lies is the first book to thematically address the role of lying in the American legal system. Undercover police agents are permitted to lie in the name of catching criminals, and government officials are permitted to lie in service of national security. In the case of the military's "Don't Ask, Don't Tell" policy, lying was not only permitted, but actively encouraged. A range of illuminating case studies reveal that the government's tolerance of deception is rarely as simple as the "whole truth.""--
In: Organization science, Band 20, Heft 3, S. 481-499
ISSN: 1526-5455
This paper theoretically and empirically engages the relationship between organizational identity and deception using the market for early jazz recordings as a setting. In this setting, pseudonyms (where a recording is reissued under a fictitious name) were used deceptively as a way to preserve a firm's identity while selling profitable but identity-threatening products to the mass market. Firms founded in the Victorian Era actively sought alignment with the cultural elite and used pseudonyms to deceive observers into believing that their production of cultural products was consistent with their Victorian Era identity. In effect, pseudonyms allowed these firms to decouple their position in identity space from their position in product space by inflating production of identity-preserving products. Using product data from jazz discographies, record company directories, and record advertisements in major U.S. newspapers, we provide strong empirical evidence that Victorian Era firms were active in using pseudonyms to preserve their identities.
Cover -- Title Page -- Copyright Page -- Contents -- Foreword -- Introduction: Riddle Me This, ChatGPT -- A Tale of Two Intelligences -- Deception: What's Old Is New Again -- The AI Inflection Point -- How to Read This Book -- My Approach to AI, Life, and This Book -- A Bit About Me -- A Quick Look at What's Ahead -- A New Hope -- Chapter 1 The Eternal Battle for the Mind: Why You Should Care -- Whispers from the Static -- Pleased to Meet You, Hope You Guessed My Name -- The Historical Context of Deception and Scams -- Ancient Origins: From the Trojan Horse to Snake Oil Salesmen -- The Evolution of Scams: Adapting to Changing Technologies -- The Digital Age: A New Era of Deception -- The Rise of the Internet: Expanding the Reach of Scammers -- The Advent of Social Media: The Perfect Platform for Disinformation -- The AI Inflection Point: Automating and Enhancing Deception -- The Far-Reaching Implications of Synthetic Media -- Why Synthetic Media Slips Right Past Our Defenses -- Cognitive Security 101: Protecting Our Minds in the Digital Age -- Takeaways -- Chapter 2 The New Frontiers of Deception: AI and Synthetic Media -- Whispers from the Static -- Inflection Points -- Brief History of AI Advances -- The Deception of Fake AI -- Tokens, Context Windows, and Attention: The Building Blocks of Language Models -- Let's Chat about ChatGPT -- Is AI Alive and Does It Really Understand? -- The Erosion of Trust, the Liar's Dividend, and the Need for Action -- Takeaways -- Chapter 3 The Mindset and Tools of a Digital Manipulator: Whispers from the Static -- How Hackers Approach Technology and Problem Solving -- A Hacker's Mind: Two Examples -- Deceptionology 101: Introduction to the Dark Arts -- Thinking, Fast and Slow -- Cognitive Biases: Our Mental Shortcuts -- We've Been Framed -- Example: Framing in a Medical Context -- Example: Framing in Magic.
We implemented a Choice Blindness Paradigm containing political statements in Argentina to reveal the existence of categorical ranges of introspective reports, identified by confidence and agreement levels, separating easy from very hard to manipulate decisions. CBP was implemented in both live and web-based forms. Importantly, and contrary to what was observed in Sweden, we did not observe changes in voting intentions. Also, confidence levels in the manipulated replies where significantly lower than in non-manipulated cases even in undetected manipulations. We name this phenomenon unconscious detection of selfdeception. Results also show that females are more difficult to manipulate than men. ; Fil: Rieznik, Andrés. Universidad Torcuato Di Tella, Escuela de Negocios, Laboratorio de Neurociencia, Buenos Aires, Argentina. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas (CONICET), Buenos Aires, Argentina. El Gato y La Caja, Buenos Aires, Argentina. ; Fil: Moscovich, Lorena. Universidad de San Andrés, Buenos Aires, Argentina ; Fil: Frieiro, Alan. Universidad de Vigo, Vigo, España ; Fil: Figini, Julieta. Universidad de San Andrés, Buenos Aires, Argentina ; Fil: Catalano, Rodrigo. El Gato y La Caja, Buenos Aires, Argentina ; Fil: Garrido, Juan Manuel. El Gato y La Caja, Buenos Aires, Argentina ; Fil: Álvarez Heduan, Facundo. El Gato y La Caja, Buenos Aires, Argentina ; Fil: Sigman, Mariano. CONICET, Buenos Aires, Argentina. Universidad Torcuato Di Tella, Escuela de Negocios, Laboratorio de Neurociencia, Buenos Aires, Argentina ; Fil: González, Pablo A. El Gato y La Caja, Buenos Aires, Argentina
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We implemented a Choice Blindness Paradigm containing political statements in Argentina to reveal the existence of categorical ranges of introspective reports, identified by confidence and agreement levels, separating easy from very hard to manipulate decisions. CBP was implemented in both live and web-based forms. Importantly, and contrary to what was observed in Sweden, we did not observe changes in voting intentions. Also, confidence levels in the manipulated replies where significantly lower than in non-manipulated cases even in undetected manipulations. We name this phenomenon unconscious detection of selfdeception. Results also show that females are more difficult to manipulate than men. ; Fil: Rieznik, Andrés Anibal. Universidad Torcuato Di Tella; Argentina. El Gato y La Caja; Argentina. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas; Argentina ; Fil: Moscovich, Lorena Giselle. Universidad de San Andrés; Argentina. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas; Argentina ; Fil: Frieiro, Alan. Universidad de Vigo; España ; Fil: Figini, Julieta. Universidad de San Andrés; Argentina ; Fil: Catalano, Rodrigo. El Gato y La Caja; Argentina ; Fil: Conde Garrido, Juan Manuel. El Gato y La Caja; Argentina. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas; Argentina ; Fil: Alvarez Heduan, Facundo. El Gato y La Caja; Argentina. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas; Argentina ; Fil: Sigman, Mariano. Universidad Torcuato Di Tella; Argentina. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas; Argentina ; Fil: González, Pablo Adrián. El Gato y La Caja; Argentina
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This Research entitled "Legal Protection Against Blogger Good Faith Domine Name Of Alleged Deception Famous Brand Reputation (Passing Off)". The problem of this study was, first: How does the domain name in a legal setting in Indonesia. Second: What is the legal protection of domain name for blogger's good faith if there are similarities with the domain name famous brand. This research method using normative methods, the legal research done by examining library materials. Which refers to the legal norms contained in the legislation, international conventions, international agreements and court decisions. The results showed, first: The domain name has been linked closely with the brand and copyright but the domain name is not synonymous with the brand and copyright, as it has a system and registration requirements as well as the recognition of the existence differently. So far there are kekososngan norms that specifically regulate the domain name issue in Indonesia. Until now, the settings used by the international ICANN (Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers), the competent authority dealing with internet IP Addres, and domain name system management. Second: Legal protection for bloggers acting in good faith if there are similarities regarding the domain name can be a famous brand is preventive legal protection and the protection of repressive laws which refers to the settlement of a litigation matter (referring to the legal protection of IPR, Civil, Criminal and Law ITE) and non-litigation (both ADR and UDRP).
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This text should be understood as an interdisciplinary inquiry into one of the most successful US TV series:Breaking Bad(BB). I use political theory analysis, plot analysis that one could understand as textual analysis of the story, and my interpretations of the series' main characters.In the first chapter, I present a summary of the story of Walter White and how his decisions affect his family. In the second chapter, I analyse BB according to Thomas Hobbes' Leviathan. What Hobbes meant with his famous saying that man is man's wolf,thus a deadly reciprocal threat of all against all comes to life in Walter becoming a full-fledged criminal, murder and deception now the tools of his new chosen craft. Walter is breaking bad, ignoring societal norms and ethical values, pursuing relentlessly his plans of making money for his family, enjoying his new self as a powerful provider because that is what men do: they provide. The third chapter is dedicated to an analysis how Hannah Arendt's definitions of power, strength, authority, violence and judgement can explain Walter's change from Paulus to Saulus. In the conclusion, I shall present my thoughts about the series and answer the following research questions: first, why is the global public still so smitten with Walter White? Second, what can one learn from BB for our contemporaryconditio humanain the 21st century? Third, is Walter White the master of his life, thus self-determined (Selbstbestimmung), or is he dominated by forces outside of his own free will (Fremdbestimmung)?
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This thesis investigates how food naming is regulated in the European Union with the aim to structure and explain the different rules regulating food naming and the interactions between the different rules, thereby clarifying de lege lata. Further, the thesis sets out to determine to what degree the Member States within the EU are free to regulate the naming of imported as well as domestically produced food, by way of legislation and/or by enforcement of the prohibition against misleading names. The interaction between the prohibition against misleading names and the obligation to mutually recognise names which have been legally used in other Member States are central in this thesis. The first part of the thesis introduces the thesis subject and provides an explanation to the approaches taken. The empirical data used for identifying practical real-life cases concerning potentially misleading names is presented. The second part of the thesis elaborates on the various EU rules in secondary law, their scope and objectives, including an examination of the rationales behind the rules based on application of economic theory. The borderlines between the rules are clarified. Part three of the thesis contains legal dogmatic analyses and discussions of the different EU rules regulating food naming. The analyses of the rules are based on practical real-life cases in which food naming has shown to be a challenging task. The difficulties addressed relate to: precision of names (the task of finding a name precise enough to provide adequate information to consumers without narrowing the product's competitive field); product identity (difficulties in naming products that refer to specific ingredients and in which traditional ingredients have been replaced); the use of geographical names (which potentially mislead consumers) and language difficulties. In the last chapter of part three an analysis is provided of the concept of fairness and general prohibition against misleading consumers in order to clarify the criteria for applying these in real-life cases. Despite the existence of rather detailed rules on naming and labelling of food, which provides clarity in relation to food naming, the application of these rules is dependent on consumers' expectation and potentially deception which must be assessed on a case-by-case basis, whereby the predictability of the rules is weakened. Part four of the thesis focuses on the borderlines between primary and secondary EU law and on answering the second part of the research question. Primary EU law defines the fundamental borderlines for EU law on food names and limits how food legislation can and must be applied. First part of this analysis focuses on the naming of imported food products, while the second part focuses on the naming of domestically produced food. The relevant sources of law are analysed and discussions are provided. It is concluded that the principle of mutual recognition takes precedence over the prohibition against misleading names, which prevents Member States from regulating the naming of imported food, by way of legislation and by enforcement of the prohibition against misleading names. Secondary EU law also limits how Member States can regulate the naming of domestically produced food. Part five provides the conclusion to the research question.
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Intro -- Description -- Author Bio -- Back Cover -- Title Page -- Copyright Page -- Dedication -- Contents -- Acknowledgments -- Introduction: Nothing but the Truth -- Chapter 1: "I've Only Had Three" -- Chapter 2: I Was Wanted -- Chapter 3: The Same Penny -- Chapter 4: No Match for Kids -- Chapter 5: Let's Have a Party -- Chapter 6: The Girl for Me -- Chapter 7: "It's Been Thirty-Three Days" -- Chapter 8: The First Time in My Life -- Chapter 9: "Keep Your Coattails Down" -- Chapter 10: Questions about Your Position -- Chapter 11: The Enemy of the Best -- Chapter 12: "There's No Way" -- Chapter 13: Fixing a Pound Cake -- Chapter 14: The Rage and Fury -- Chapter 15: "Come and Dine" -- Chapter 16: A Higher Calling -- Chapter 17: Lying on the Couch -- Chapter 18: The Elders -- Chapter 19: My Offer Is Final -- Chapter 20: "She's Seeing Someone Else" -- Chapter 21: For More Than Two Years -- Chapter 22: "She Won't Leave Me Alone" -- Chapter 23: Removed from Life Support -- Chapter 24: They Didn't Like Him -- Chapter 25: A Problem I Couldn't Deny -- Chapter 26: "I Think I Know You" -- Chapter 27: She Needed Me -- Chapter 28: They Often Look Trustworthy -- Chapter 29: In Charge of the Courtroom -- Chapter 30: "He Looks Just Like You" -- Chapter 31: "Don't You Come Back" -- Chapter 32: "Your Grandson" -- Chapter 33: Money without Earning It -- Chapter 34: A Game of Self-Deception -- Chapter 35: My Moment of Truth -- Chapter 36: I Longed for a Soul Mate -- Chapter 37: "You Are under Arrest" -- Chapter 38: She Needed Rescuing -- Chapter 39: She Was Entitled to More -- Chapter 40: A Pattern of Theft -- Chapter 41: "I Want Out" -- Chapter 42: I Had to Outsmart Her -- Chapter 43: "Under False Pretenses" -- Chapter 44: Handcuffed and Taken to Jail -- Chapter 45: End Up in Prison -- Chapter 46: Lies Increase Your Bondage -- Chapter 47: Confused and Adrift.