Social Media


Social Media Survey

How U.S. tariffs set social media on fire around the world

Social media’s reaction to President Trump’s threat of substantial tariffs was almost universally negative, according to data from Ipsos Synthesio.
Social Media Publication

Decoding Misinformation: Why we fall for fake news

Understanding the factors that influence a person's ability to distinguish between real and fake news is crucial to tackling the misinformation crisis.
Social Media Survey

Ipsos wins ANA B2 award for The Path insights series

Ipsos recognized for excellence in business-to-business marketing with prestigious bronze GEM award from the Association of National Advertisers
Media Publication

How Compelling Creative Drives Business Results

A new white paper by Ipsos and TikTok identifies strategies for crafting content that truly resonates by demonstrating empathy, variety, and impact.
Polling Survey

Half support banning TikTok, as the 2024 presidential election remains a toss-up

New Reuters/Ipsos poll reveals a close presidential race and about half support banning TikTok.

Men are more confident in their ability to spot fake news or AI content

Men are quite confident (72%) in their ability to tell real news from fake news than women (59%), according to new polling from the Ipsos Consumer Tracker. We see a similar gender gap when it comes to our perceived ability to tell content that was created by AI.
Social Media Survey

About eight in ten parents with children under 18 on 'traditional' social media apps worry about their children using video/image-sharing apps

New Aura/Ipsos poll finds that two in three parents with children on social media say their child has experienced a negative effect of social media.
Polling Survey

In less than a week, 7% of Americans now say they have a Threads account

New Ipsos polling finds that more are willing to try the new social media app
Polling Survey

Over half of Americans with a Twitter account say they are likely to try Threads in the next few weeks

Many feel that Twitter is dominated by extreme and unpleasant people