Published August 15, 2025 | Version v1
Journal article Open

COUNTERFEIT CULTURE AND THE ETHICS OF INFLUENCE: SOCIAL MEDIA'S ROLE IN SHAPING CONSUMER COMPLICITY AND MORAL RATIONALIZATION

  • 1. Research Scholars Program, Harvard Student Agencies, In collaboration with Learn with Leaders

Description

This paper investigates the ethical justifiability of counterfeit goods and the role of social media in shaping consumer complicity in these markets. Using a literature review, the research explores the psychological and social reasons that normalize counterfeit consumption. Key findings highlight the disillusioning effect influencers have on their audience, blurring the lines between marketing and personal recommendation, which leads to unethical consumption. The paper also identifies negative externalities of counterfeiting, including labor exploitation, loss of innovation, and economic harm to legitimate businesses. The research concludes that counterfeiting is not ethically justifiable and recommends solutions such as consumer education, stronger platform regulation, and the exploration of digital verification technologies.

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Is published in
Journal: 2454-9916 (EISSN)

Dates

Available
2025-08-15

References