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To combat workplace sexual harassment, companies must prioritize elevating women into leadership roles, fostering a culture of accountability, ensuring safe reporting mechanisms, and providing comprehensive in-person training that empowers bystanders to act against misconduct.
Gretchen Carlson’s whistleblowing on workplace sexual harassment sparked a transformative journey for justice, highlighting the need for multifaceted solutions—including legal reforms, education, and organizational culture shifts—to effectively combat harassment and improve women’s lives and corporate outcomes.
As generative AI transforms society, leaders must model responsible use by fostering collaboration, setting realistic guidelines, encouraging exploration, creating a cooperative culture, ensuring data privacy, and demonstrating effective AI practices to guide their teams.
As generative AI evolves, ethical concerns about bias, privacy, and copyright arise, prompting the need for awareness and responsible usage, as discussed by Professor Ethan Mollick in his video lesson on navigating these challenges in professional contexts.
Robert Cialdini emphasizes the ethical use of persuasion and pre-suasion, warning that irresponsible practices can lead to high turnover and a culture of dishonesty, while encouraging businesses to prioritize customer interests and the genuine value of their offerings.
Ethical companies should consider the cognitive burden their products impose, as limited bandwidth can hinder marginalized populations from navigating administrative barriers, leading to distributional unfairness and potential human rights violations, necessitating thoughtful design to ensure equitable access.
Professor Cass Sunstein discusses how companies use “sludge” to complicate unsubscribing, manipulating consumer behavior against their interests, while advocating for “choice architecture” that promotes beneficial defaults and simplifies decision-making while preserving user freedom.
In a video lesson, Professor Cass Sunstein discusses three types of designers—manipulative, naive, and human-centered—highlighting how the latter prioritizes user experience by minimizing “sludge” and fostering customer satisfaction.
In a video lesson, Professor Yuval Harari emphasizes the need for safeguards against AI’s potential to undermine public trust and democratic dialogue, advocating for transparency in AI identities and corporate accountability to combat misinformation while preserving genuine human expression.
As AI rapidly transforms our reality and reshapes engagement with information, Professor Yuval Noah Harari urges us to pause and critically consider the implications of coexisting with non-human intelligence, emphasizing the need for responsible leadership and safeguarding our humanity.
In a crisis, leaders must pause to acknowledge five hard truths—about the severity of the situation, the inevitability of secrets surfacing, the potential for negative portrayals, the likelihood of accountability, and the opportunity for organizational improvement—to develop resilient strategies for effective management.
Bazerman’s bounded ethicality highlights how ordinary psychological processes can lead good people to unknowingly engage in unethical behavior, as illustrated by the Challenger tragedy, emphasizing the need for heightened awareness, firm ethical grounding, and thorough consideration of data omissions in decision-making.