Blowback in a sentence as a noun

Not only is the blowback from this effort bad PR, but I fail to see what FB stood to gain from this in the first place.

Now, granted, publicity and "blowback" from Assange supporters might well be a cause for this.

"Being surprised when a company tries to increase revenues and reduce costs while avoiding PR blowback is like being surprised when a dog humps your leg.

He had had some blowback from his ASmartBear guest post recently, where he started a blog post in which he mentions, in passing, waking up next to his naked girlfriend.

The military has to keep engaged to justify its existence, and the blowback from this will give it an unending stream of future "customers".

This is perhaps a negative blowback of Toady's very laudable vision to have each dwarf be independently simulated.

It also is likely to generate massive blowback - some of the people you torture become or inspire new enemies, whereas people you are nice to might become friends and voluntarily help the investigation.

Yeah, there's going to be some blowback from employees and the media but at the end of the day it wouldn't be surprising if Mayer is reading all these articles and saying "Oh if you only knew what remote work is doing to this company...".Remote work as far as I'm concerned is a great thing - but it's probably hurting Yahoo!

Blowback definitions

noun

the backward escape of gases and unburned gunpowder after a gun is fired

See also: backfire

noun

misinformation resulting from the recirculation into the source country of disinformation previously planted abroad by that country's intelligence service