Close Menu
  • Homepage
  • News
  • Cloud & AI
  • ECommerce
  • Entertainment
  • Finance
  • Opinion
  • Podcast
  • Contact

Subscribe to Updates

Get the latest technology news from TechFinancials News about FinTech, Tech, Business, Telecoms and Connected Life.

What's Hot

How Microsoft’s New AI Aims To Transform Science Research

2025-05-19

SIU To Probe SITA, Bushbuckridge Municipality

2025-05-19

Special Tribunal freezes R25M In Assets From Stolen Lottery Funds

2025-05-19
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Trending
  • How Microsoft’s New AI Aims To Transform Science Research
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram YouTube LinkedIn WhatsApp RSS
TechFinancials
  • Homepage
  • News
  • Cloud & AI
  • ECommerce
  • Entertainment
  • Finance
  • Opinion
  • Podcast
  • Contact
TechFinancials
Home»Opinion»How Deepfakes And Disinformation Threaten Business
Opinion

How Deepfakes And Disinformation Threaten Business

Anna CollardBy Anna Collard2025-04-03Updated:2025-04-03No Comments5 Mins Read
Share Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
Deepfakes
Deepfakes. Freepik
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email Copy Link

Last weekend, at a typical South African braai (barbeque), I found myself in a heated conversation with someone highly educated—yet passionately defending a piece of Russian propaganda that had already been widely debunked. It was unsettling. The conversation quickly became irrational, emotional, and very uncomfortable. That moment crystallised something for me: we’re no longer just approaching an era where truth is under threat—we’re already living in it. A reality where falsity feels familiar, and information is weaponised to polarize societies and manipulate our belief systems. And now, with the democratisation of AI tools like deepfakes, anyone with enough intent can impersonate authority, generate convincing narratives, and erode trust—at scale.

The Evolution of Disinformation: From Election Interference to Enterprise Exploitation

The 2024 KnowBe4 Political Disinformation in Africa Survey revealed a striking contradiction: while 84% of respondents use social media as their main news source, 80% admit that most fake news originates there. Despite this, 58% have never received any training on identifying misinformation​.

This confidence gap echoes findings in the Africa Cybersecurity & Awareness 2025 Report, where 83% of respondents said they’d recognise a security threat if they saw one—yet 37% had fallen for fake news or disinformation, and 35% had lost money due to a scam.

What’s going wrong? It’s not a lack of intelligence—it’s psychology.

The Psychology of Believing the Untrue

Humans are not rational processors of information; we’re emotional, biased, and wired to believe things that feel easy and familiar. Disinformation campaigns—whether political or criminal—exploit this.

  1. The Illusory Truth Effect: The easier something is to process, the more likely we are to believe it—even if it’s false (Unkelbach et al., 2019). Fake content often uses bold headlines, simple language, and dramatic visuals that “feel” true.
  2. The Mere Exposure Effect: The more often we see something, the more we tend to like or accept it—regardless of its accuracy (Zajonc, 1968). Repetition breeds believability.
  3. Confirmation Bias: We’re more likely to believe and even share false information when it aligns with our values or beliefs.

A recent example is the viral deepfake image of Hurricane Helena shared across social media. Despite fact-checkers clearly identifying it as fake, the post continued to spread. Why? Because it resonated emotionally with users’ felt frustration and emotional frame of mind. 

Deepfakes and State-Sponsored Deception

According to the Africa Centre for Strategic Studies, disinformation campaigns on the continent have nearly quadrupled since 2022. Even more troubling: nearly 60% are state-sponsored, often aiming to destabilise democracies and economies. The rise of AI-assisted manipulation adds fuel to this fire. Deepfakes now allow anyone to fabricate video or audio that’s nearly indistinguishable from the real thing. 

Why This Matters for Business

This isn’t just about national security or political manipulation —it’s about corporate survival too. Today’s attackers don’t need to breach your firewall. They can trick your people. This has already led to corporate-level losses, like the Hong Kong finance employee tricked into transferring over $25 million during a fake video call with deepfaked “executives.” These corporate disinformation or narrative based attack can also result in: 

  • Fake press releases can tank your stock.
  • Deepfaked CEOs can authorise wire transfers.
  • Viral falsehoods can ruin reputations before PR even logs in.

The WEF’s 2024 Global Risk Report named misinformation and disinformation as the top global risk, surpassing even climate and geopolitical instability. That’s a red flag businesses cannot ignore.

The convergence of state-sponsored disinformation, AI-enabled fraud, and employee overconfidence creates a perfect storm. Combating this new frontier of cyber risk requires more than just better firewalls. It demands informed minds, digital humility, and resilient cultures.

Building Cognitive Resilience

What can be done? While AI-empowered defenses can help improve detection capabilities, technology alone won’t save us. Organisations must also build cognitive immunity—the ability for employees to discern, verify, and challenge what they see and hear. 

  1. Adopt a Zero Trust Mindset—Everywhere
    Just as systems don’t trust a device or user by default, people should treat information the same way, with a healthy dose of scepticism. Encourage employees to verify headlines, validate sources, and challenge urgency or emotional manipulation—even when it looks or sounds familiar.
  2. Introduce Digital Mindfulness Training
    Train employees to pause, reflect, and evaluate before they click, share, or respond. This awareness helps build cognitive resilience—especially against emotionally manipulative or repetitive content designed to bypass critical thinking. Educate on deepfakes, synthetic media, AI impersonation, and narrative manipulation. Build understanding of how human psychology is exploited—not just technology.
  3. Treat Disinformation Like a Threat Vector
    Monitor for fake press releases, viral social media posts, or impersonation attempts targeting your brand, leaders, or employees. Include reputational risk in your incident response plans.

The battle against disinformation isn’t just a technical one—it’s psychological. In a world where anything can be faked, the ability to pause, think clearly, and question intelligently is a vital layer of security. Truth has become a moving target. In this new era, clarity is a skill that we need to hone.

  • Anna Collard, SVP Content Strategy & Evangelist, KnowBe4 Africa

Anna Collard Business Deepfakes Disinformation Era of Manipulation impersonate authority
Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
Anna Collard

Related Posts

The Digital Divide’s Dark Side: Cybersecurity In African Higher Education

2025-05-19

Ramaphosa-Trump Talks Must Address Big Tech’s Grip On Africa

2025-05-19

How Openserve Is Engineering The Future Of Connectivity

2025-05-18

Balancing AI With Human Expertise In Healthcare

2025-05-16

Are We Raising AI Correctly? 

2025-05-16

South African Companies Aren’t Innovating Enough

2025-05-16

DA Exposes SAPS Body Camera Delay: No Cameras Deployed Yet

2025-05-14

Microsoft Cuts 6,000 Jobs, 3% of Workforce, Amid Restructuring

2025-05-14

AI Can Be A Danger To Students – 3 Things Universities Must Do

2025-05-14
Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

DON'T MISS
Breaking News

Vodacom To Spend R20bn On Network Expansion, Targets 260M Users

Vodacom Group has announced plans to invest over R20 billion in capital expenditure (capex) in the coming…

UIF Grants SA Post Office R381M Lifeline To Save Jobs

2025-05-18

Are We Raising AI Correctly? 

2025-05-16

TV Licences Are Outdated, But Is A Streaming Levy The Right Fix?

2025-03-17
Stay In Touch
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • YouTube
  • LinkedIn
OUR PICKS

Vodacom Eyes African Fibre JVs, Keeps FinTech As Core Business

2025-05-19

Vodacom Says Please Call Me Compensation Range Still Uncertain

2025-05-19

Phygital Shopping Rises In SA: Blending Online & In-Store

2025-04-18

Foreigner Nabbed With 554 Cellphones Worth R2.5m In Bloemfontein

2025-04-18

Subscribe to Updates

Get the latest tech news from TechFinancials about telecoms, fintech and connected life.

About Us

TechFinancials delivers in-depth analysis of tech, digital revolution, fintech, e-commerce, digital banking and breaking tech news.

Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram YouTube LinkedIn WhatsApp Reddit RSS
Our Picks

How Microsoft’s New AI Aims To Transform Science Research

2025-05-19

SIU To Probe SITA, Bushbuckridge Municipality

2025-05-19

Special Tribunal freezes R25M In Assets From Stolen Lottery Funds

2025-05-19
Recent Posts
  • How Microsoft’s New AI Aims To Transform Science Research
  • SIU To Probe SITA, Bushbuckridge Municipality
  • Special Tribunal freezes R25M In Assets From Stolen Lottery Funds
  • Forex Trading vs. Stock Market: Which One Is Better For South Africans?
  • The Digital Divide’s Dark Side: Cybersecurity In African Higher Education
TechFinancials
RSS Facebook X (Twitter) LinkedIn YouTube WhatsApp
  • Homepage
  • Newsletter
  • Contact
  • Advertise
  • About
© 2025 TechFinancials. Designed by TFS Media.

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.

Ad Blocker Enabled!
Ad Blocker Enabled!
Our website is made possible by displaying online advertisements to our visitors. Please support us by disabling your Ad Blocker.