Enterprise Spending on Fighting False Information to Surpass $30 Billion by 2028
By 2028, enterprise spending on battling misinformation and disinformation will surpass $30 billion, according to Gartner.

By 2028, enterprise spending on battling misinformation and disinformation will surpass $30 billion, according to Gartner. The study says that this fight would cannibalize 10% of marketing and cybersecurity budgets to combat a multifront threat.
In the new Gartner book World Without Truth, authors Dave Aron, Andrew Frank, and Richard Hunter explain that false information poses significant financial and reputational risks to organizations. As a result, all executive leaders must address it as an enterprise-wide priority.
In fact, a December 2024 Gartner survey of 200 senior business and technology executives found that 72% of respondents identified misinformation, disinformation, and malinformation as very or relatively important issues to their executive committees. However, only 30% said it was a top-five concern.
“The lack of reliable information needs to be seen as a meta-issue that compromises everyone’s ability to understand and deal with all other issues. In a world without truth, how can society decide how big a concern climate change is, what its causes are, and how to address them? How can society address global health challenges? And at the corporate level, how can companies maintain relationships with their customers, employees, investors, and other stakeholders in a world where people feel they can no longer believe what they read, see, or hear?” said Andrew Frank.
“The disinformation threat will continue to grow, fueled by increasingly elaborate uses of synthetic reality, behavioral science, and digital media. However, there are concrete steps that organizations can take to marginalize the impact and track new threat vectors,” added Dave Aron.
False information has been part of human culture for as long as societies have existed, but three distinct phenomena are combining to amplify its power and danger radically:
As AI raises new challenges to transparency and trust in content, TrustOps is a proactive, integrated approach to enhancing organizational trustworthiness, credibility, and transparency while mitigating risks from misinformation and harmful associations. “The core idea is to treat trust not as an incidental outcome of marketing or compliance, but as a deliberate operational objective—to protect content integrity and foster consumer confidence,” said Ruchard Hunter.
The book recommends organizations form Trust Councils, composed of representatives from across organizational boundaries, led by C-Suite individuals from communications, IT, finance, legal, HR, and marketing. Broad participation is needed because each function has a unique perspective and responsibilities related to the topic of trustworthy content. Additionally, TrustNets of companies, technologies, and tools can create 'tunnels of trust' through the internet. TrustNets ensure trust among participants through verification, transparency, and security.
Along with TrustOps, Gartner recommends using four levers to attack disinformation: rules, governance and processes; education; nudges and incentives; and technology and tools.