EPISODE · Dec 28, 2025 · 58 MIN
The Dark Side of Source Credibility (Pyayt et al 2025) | FT50 JBE
from Revise and Resubmit - The Mayukh Show · host Mayukh Mukhopadhyay
English Podcast Starts at 00:00:00Bengali Podcast Starts at 00:13:55Hindi Podcast Starts at 00:29:16Danish Podcast Starts at 00:43:17ReferenceOo, P.P., Thomas, H., Allison et al. The Dark Side of Source Credibility: Differential Effectiveness of Credibility Cues in Fraudulent Versus Legitimate Crowdfunding Campaigns. J Bus Ethics (2025). https://doi.org/10.1007/s10551-025-06229-wYoutube Channelhttps://www.youtube.com/@weekendresearcherConnect over linkedinhttps://www.linkedin.com/in/mayukhpsm/Welcome to Revise and Resubmit 🎙️📚—the show where serious research meets sharp questions, and every claim has to earn its place.Picture this.A crowdfunding page.A smiling founder.A confident story.A campaign that feels right. 😌✨Now the twist.What if that feeling is exactly what scammers are selling? 🕵️♂️💸Today’s episode unpacks a chilling new study titled:🧠 “The Dark Side of Source Credibility: Differential Effectiveness of Credibility Cues in Fraudulent Versus Legitimate Crowdfunding Campaigns”by Pyayt P. Oo, H. Thomas, Allison, and Keith M. Hmieleski.It’s published in the Journal of Business Ethics—a prestigious FT50 journal 🏆—and it went online on 24 December 2025, published by Springer Nature.This paper asks a deceptively simple question:How do fraudulent crowdfunding campaigns persuade people… and win?The authors take source credibility theory and break credibility into three cues:Trustworthiness.Welcome to Revise and Resubmit 🎙️—where we take big academic ideas, strip out the fluff, and keep the bite.Today’s episode starts with a simple scene.A crowdfunding page. A friendly face. A confident pitch. A shiny promise. ✨You scroll. You smile. You trust. You pledge. 💸But what if that’s exactly the problem?We’re unpacking a striking new paper:“The Dark Side of Source Credibility: Differential Effectiveness of Credibility Cues in Fraudulent Versus Legitimate Crowdfunding Campaigns” 🕶️by Pyayt P. Oo, H. Thomas, Allison, and Keith M. Hmieleski.It’s published in the Journal of Business Ethics—a prestigious FT50 journal 🏆📚—and it went online on 24 December 2025 via Springer Nature.Here’s the hook.Credibility should protect us.It should guide us.It should separate the real from the fake. ✅❌But this research asks a sharper question:Which credibility cues work better for scammers than for honest creators?Using source credibility theory, the authors focus on three cues:Trustworthiness 🤝Attractiveness 😎Expertise 🧠Then they test the idea with a matched-pairs sample of 204 Kickstarter campaigns. Not vibes. Data.And the results are unsettling.Subjective signals—how trustworthy someone seems, how attractive they appear—turn out to be especially persuasive in fraudulent campaigns. These cues hit fast. They feel right. They bypass the slow, skeptical part of the brain. ⚡🧠Meanwhile, objective signals—functional expertise, the proof of real competence—matter more when the campaign is legitimate. Because expertise survives scrutiny. Charm just needs to survive the scroll. 📲This flips a comforting assumption on its head.Sometimes the cues we treat as moral indicators are just tools.And in the wrong hands, they become weapons. 🎭🧨If you like episodes that challenge how you judge people online, you’re in the right place.Subscribe to “Revise and Resubmit” on Spotify 🎧, and join the conversation on YouTube at “Weekend Researcher” 📺. You can also listen on Amazon Prime Music and Apple Podcast 🍎🎶—so you’re covered wherever you learn.And with that, sincere thanks to the authors—Pyayt P. Oo, H. Thomas, Allison, and Keith M. Hmieleski—and to Springer Nature and the Journal of Business Ethics for publishing this important work. 🙏📄Now tell me—if trustworthiness can be performed, and credibility can be engineered, how do we spot the real thing before we click “Back this project”? 🤔
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The Dark Side of Source Credibility (Pyayt et al 2025) | FT50 JBE
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