Seller Forums
Sign in
Sign in
imgSign in
imgSign in
user profile
Seller_ir2sdQjTkfjTh

Federal Trade Commission Announces Final Rule Banning Fake Reviews and Testimonials

Wasn't allowed to post the link to the FTC site.

I wonder now if Amazon will allow us to remove all the non-verified purchase reviews? The article states one standard for fake reviews is "who did not have actual experience with the business or its products or services"

The Federal Trade Commission today announced a final rule that will combat fake reviews and testimonials by prohibiting their sale or purchase and allow the agency to seek civil penalties against knowing violators.

“Fake reviews not only waste people’s time and money, but also pollute the marketplace and divert business away from honest competitors,” said FTC Chair Lina M. Khan. “By strengthening the FTC’s toolkit to fight deceptive advertising, the final rule will protect Americans from getting cheated, put businesses that unlawfully game the system on notice, and promote markets that are fair, honest, and competitive.”

The final rule announced today follows an advance notice of proposed rulemaking and a notice of proposed rulemaking announced in November 2022 and June 2023, respectively. The FTC also held an informal hearing on the proposed rule in February 2024. In response to public comments, the Commission made numerous clarifications and adjustments to its previous proposal.

The final rule prohibits:

Fake or False Consumer Reviews, Consumer Testimonials, and Celebrity Testimonials: The final rule addresses reviews and testimonials that misrepresent that they are by someone who does not exist, such as AI-generated fake reviews, or who did not have actual experience with the business or its products or services, or that misrepresent the experience of the person giving it. It prohibits businesses from creating or selling such reviews or testimonials. It also prohibits them from buying such reviews, procuring them from company insiders, or disseminating such testimonials, when the business knew or should have known that the reviews or testimonials were fake or false.

Buying Positive or Negative Reviews: The final rule prohibits businesses from providing compensation or other incentives conditioned on the writing of consumer reviews expressing a particular sentiment, either positive or negative. It clarifies that the conditional nature of the offer of compensation or incentive may be expressly or implicitly conveyed.

Insider Reviews and Consumer Testimonials: The final rule prohibits certain reviews and testimonials written by company insiders that fail to clearly and conspicuously disclose the giver’s material connection to the business. It prohibits such reviews and testimonials given by officers or managers. It also prohibits a business from disseminating such a testimonial that the business should have known was by an officer, manager, employee, or agent. Finally, it imposes requirements when officers or managers solicit consumer reviews from their own immediate relatives or from employees or agents – or when they tell employees or agents to solicit reviews from relatives and such solicitations result in reviews by immediate relatives of the employees or agents.

Company-Controlled Review Websites: The final rule prohibits a business from misrepresenting that a website or entity it controls provides independent reviews or opinions about a category of products or services that includes its own products or services.

Review Suppression: The final rule prohibits a business from using unfounded or groundless legal threats, physical threats, intimidation, or certain false public accusations to prevent or remove a negative consumer review. The final rule also bars a business from misrepresenting that the reviews on a review portion of its website represent all or most of the reviews submitted when reviews have been suppressed based upon their ratings or negative sentiment.

Misuse of Fake Social Media Indicators: The final rule prohibits anyone from selling or buying fake indicators of social media influence, such as followers or views generated by a bot or hijacked account. This prohibition is limited to situations in which the buyer knew or should have known that the indicators were fake and misrepresent the buyer’s influence or importance for a commercial purpose.

As the Commission noted previously, case-by-case enforcement without civil penalty authority might not be enough to deter clearly deceptive review and testimonial practices. The Supreme Court’s decision in AMG Capital Management LLC v. FTC has hindered the FTC’s ability to seek monetary relief for consumers under the FTC Act. This rule will enhance deterrence and strengthen FTC enforcement actions.

The Commission vote to approve the final rule and accompanying statement of basis and purpose was 5-0. The rule will become effective 60 days after the date it’s published in the Federal Register.

The primary staff members on this matter are Michael Ostheimer and Michael Atleson in the FTC’s Bureau of Consumer Protection.

The Federal Trade Commission works to promote competition and protect and educate consumers. The FTC will never demand money, make threats, tell you to transfer money, or promise you a prize. Learn more about consumer topics at consumer.ftc.gov, or report fraud, scams, and bad business practices at ReportFraud.ftc.gov. Follow the FTC on social media, read consumer alerts and the business blog, and sign up to get the latest FTC news and alerts.

1.4K views
26 replies
Tags:Negative reviews, Product reviews
300
Reply
user profile
Seller_ir2sdQjTkfjTh

Federal Trade Commission Announces Final Rule Banning Fake Reviews and Testimonials

Wasn't allowed to post the link to the FTC site.

I wonder now if Amazon will allow us to remove all the non-verified purchase reviews? The article states one standard for fake reviews is "who did not have actual experience with the business or its products or services"

The Federal Trade Commission today announced a final rule that will combat fake reviews and testimonials by prohibiting their sale or purchase and allow the agency to seek civil penalties against knowing violators.

“Fake reviews not only waste people’s time and money, but also pollute the marketplace and divert business away from honest competitors,” said FTC Chair Lina M. Khan. “By strengthening the FTC’s toolkit to fight deceptive advertising, the final rule will protect Americans from getting cheated, put businesses that unlawfully game the system on notice, and promote markets that are fair, honest, and competitive.”

The final rule announced today follows an advance notice of proposed rulemaking and a notice of proposed rulemaking announced in November 2022 and June 2023, respectively. The FTC also held an informal hearing on the proposed rule in February 2024. In response to public comments, the Commission made numerous clarifications and adjustments to its previous proposal.

The final rule prohibits:

Fake or False Consumer Reviews, Consumer Testimonials, and Celebrity Testimonials: The final rule addresses reviews and testimonials that misrepresent that they are by someone who does not exist, such as AI-generated fake reviews, or who did not have actual experience with the business or its products or services, or that misrepresent the experience of the person giving it. It prohibits businesses from creating or selling such reviews or testimonials. It also prohibits them from buying such reviews, procuring them from company insiders, or disseminating such testimonials, when the business knew or should have known that the reviews or testimonials were fake or false.

Buying Positive or Negative Reviews: The final rule prohibits businesses from providing compensation or other incentives conditioned on the writing of consumer reviews expressing a particular sentiment, either positive or negative. It clarifies that the conditional nature of the offer of compensation or incentive may be expressly or implicitly conveyed.

Insider Reviews and Consumer Testimonials: The final rule prohibits certain reviews and testimonials written by company insiders that fail to clearly and conspicuously disclose the giver’s material connection to the business. It prohibits such reviews and testimonials given by officers or managers. It also prohibits a business from disseminating such a testimonial that the business should have known was by an officer, manager, employee, or agent. Finally, it imposes requirements when officers or managers solicit consumer reviews from their own immediate relatives or from employees or agents – or when they tell employees or agents to solicit reviews from relatives and such solicitations result in reviews by immediate relatives of the employees or agents.

Company-Controlled Review Websites: The final rule prohibits a business from misrepresenting that a website or entity it controls provides independent reviews or opinions about a category of products or services that includes its own products or services.

Review Suppression: The final rule prohibits a business from using unfounded or groundless legal threats, physical threats, intimidation, or certain false public accusations to prevent or remove a negative consumer review. The final rule also bars a business from misrepresenting that the reviews on a review portion of its website represent all or most of the reviews submitted when reviews have been suppressed based upon their ratings or negative sentiment.

Misuse of Fake Social Media Indicators: The final rule prohibits anyone from selling or buying fake indicators of social media influence, such as followers or views generated by a bot or hijacked account. This prohibition is limited to situations in which the buyer knew or should have known that the indicators were fake and misrepresent the buyer’s influence or importance for a commercial purpose.

As the Commission noted previously, case-by-case enforcement without civil penalty authority might not be enough to deter clearly deceptive review and testimonial practices. The Supreme Court’s decision in AMG Capital Management LLC v. FTC has hindered the FTC’s ability to seek monetary relief for consumers under the FTC Act. This rule will enhance deterrence and strengthen FTC enforcement actions.

The Commission vote to approve the final rule and accompanying statement of basis and purpose was 5-0. The rule will become effective 60 days after the date it’s published in the Federal Register.

The primary staff members on this matter are Michael Ostheimer and Michael Atleson in the FTC’s Bureau of Consumer Protection.

The Federal Trade Commission works to promote competition and protect and educate consumers. The FTC will never demand money, make threats, tell you to transfer money, or promise you a prize. Learn more about consumer topics at consumer.ftc.gov, or report fraud, scams, and bad business practices at ReportFraud.ftc.gov. Follow the FTC on social media, read consumer alerts and the business blog, and sign up to get the latest FTC news and alerts.

Tags:Negative reviews, Product reviews
300
1.4K views
26 replies
Reply
26 replies
user profile
Seller_4zBzdtgCyS9EI

well, at the very least you can take Amazon to court for violating law, if you report fake reviews and they ignore it.....

100
user profile
Seller_rI7BZIczK8iAC

Then, they will not only leave a rating or a review but BUY the product beforehand.... will be a bit more expensive for the cheating seller, but that is what wil happen. IMO that will eliminate about 70% of the false ratings, that's better than nothing.

60
user profile
Seller_9yQUzZAP34cYw

The FTC and anyone in government is on Amazon's payroll so it is unlikely anything will change. When you can make every government official a millionaire every month for the rest of their term, you get to do what you want.

210
user profile
Seller_BE3xPpZWhTS9Z

Note that part of this regulation includes penalties for businesses that suppress negative reviews. We may see this cited by Amazon as the reason they are unable to remove bad, fake reviews.

30
user profile
Seller_1oT4ZOwrSByEE

we had a fake review before we sold 1 unit of a brand new product, amazon refused to do anything.

170
user profile
Seller_WtOwWhtSrFjva

I think Jeff had a good ideal in the beginning. But with all the fake reviews and scammers, the idea is no longer doing what he intended.

With that being said, I think all reviews should be removed.

53
user profile
Seller_oDXVaydIpi3Hi

No, they'll just lie and return it, too. So the seller will get hit with return fees, damaged products, and bad reviews.

user profile
Seller_rI7BZIczK8iAC
will be a bit more expensive for the cheating seller, but that is what wil happen.
View post
10
user profile
Seller_phy2uq6HMLwRI

Somewhat reassuring,

but Amazon needs to remove all the reviews from sellers who started before 2019 or just before the pandemic.

I started my company during this time and the prior sellers should held to same standard as I have for reviews. It's a unfair that their fake review are allowed to stand as these grandfathered sellers from 2000's-2018 on the platform.

Prior sellers ratings should be reinitialized like all the new sellers who come onboard with the new review rules implemented by Amazon since 2019/2020.

I think it would only be fair to make every seller accountable from before from review point of view. Amazon should do a complete audit of old sellers and make them start fresh again on the review side to be in line and fair will all the new sellers since 2019/2020.

Cause we just cannot just compete with 1000s of reviews that were potentially fake from sellers gathered from before.

06
user profile
Seller_2srXkS44rN39i



[Moderator Edit: removed inappropriate commentary]

10
user profile
Seller_ir2sdQjTkfjTh

Federal Trade Commission Announces Final Rule Banning Fake Reviews and Testimonials

Wasn't allowed to post the link to the FTC site.

I wonder now if Amazon will allow us to remove all the non-verified purchase reviews? The article states one standard for fake reviews is "who did not have actual experience with the business or its products or services"

The Federal Trade Commission today announced a final rule that will combat fake reviews and testimonials by prohibiting their sale or purchase and allow the agency to seek civil penalties against knowing violators.

“Fake reviews not only waste people’s time and money, but also pollute the marketplace and divert business away from honest competitors,” said FTC Chair Lina M. Khan. “By strengthening the FTC’s toolkit to fight deceptive advertising, the final rule will protect Americans from getting cheated, put businesses that unlawfully game the system on notice, and promote markets that are fair, honest, and competitive.”

The final rule announced today follows an advance notice of proposed rulemaking and a notice of proposed rulemaking announced in November 2022 and June 2023, respectively. The FTC also held an informal hearing on the proposed rule in February 2024. In response to public comments, the Commission made numerous clarifications and adjustments to its previous proposal.

The final rule prohibits:

Fake or False Consumer Reviews, Consumer Testimonials, and Celebrity Testimonials: The final rule addresses reviews and testimonials that misrepresent that they are by someone who does not exist, such as AI-generated fake reviews, or who did not have actual experience with the business or its products or services, or that misrepresent the experience of the person giving it. It prohibits businesses from creating or selling such reviews or testimonials. It also prohibits them from buying such reviews, procuring them from company insiders, or disseminating such testimonials, when the business knew or should have known that the reviews or testimonials were fake or false.

Buying Positive or Negative Reviews: The final rule prohibits businesses from providing compensation or other incentives conditioned on the writing of consumer reviews expressing a particular sentiment, either positive or negative. It clarifies that the conditional nature of the offer of compensation or incentive may be expressly or implicitly conveyed.

Insider Reviews and Consumer Testimonials: The final rule prohibits certain reviews and testimonials written by company insiders that fail to clearly and conspicuously disclose the giver’s material connection to the business. It prohibits such reviews and testimonials given by officers or managers. It also prohibits a business from disseminating such a testimonial that the business should have known was by an officer, manager, employee, or agent. Finally, it imposes requirements when officers or managers solicit consumer reviews from their own immediate relatives or from employees or agents – or when they tell employees or agents to solicit reviews from relatives and such solicitations result in reviews by immediate relatives of the employees or agents.

Company-Controlled Review Websites: The final rule prohibits a business from misrepresenting that a website or entity it controls provides independent reviews or opinions about a category of products or services that includes its own products or services.

Review Suppression: The final rule prohibits a business from using unfounded or groundless legal threats, physical threats, intimidation, or certain false public accusations to prevent or remove a negative consumer review. The final rule also bars a business from misrepresenting that the reviews on a review portion of its website represent all or most of the reviews submitted when reviews have been suppressed based upon their ratings or negative sentiment.

Misuse of Fake Social Media Indicators: The final rule prohibits anyone from selling or buying fake indicators of social media influence, such as followers or views generated by a bot or hijacked account. This prohibition is limited to situations in which the buyer knew or should have known that the indicators were fake and misrepresent the buyer’s influence or importance for a commercial purpose.

As the Commission noted previously, case-by-case enforcement without civil penalty authority might not be enough to deter clearly deceptive review and testimonial practices. The Supreme Court’s decision in AMG Capital Management LLC v. FTC has hindered the FTC’s ability to seek monetary relief for consumers under the FTC Act. This rule will enhance deterrence and strengthen FTC enforcement actions.

The Commission vote to approve the final rule and accompanying statement of basis and purpose was 5-0. The rule will become effective 60 days after the date it’s published in the Federal Register.

The primary staff members on this matter are Michael Ostheimer and Michael Atleson in the FTC’s Bureau of Consumer Protection.

The Federal Trade Commission works to promote competition and protect and educate consumers. The FTC will never demand money, make threats, tell you to transfer money, or promise you a prize. Learn more about consumer topics at consumer.ftc.gov, or report fraud, scams, and bad business practices at ReportFraud.ftc.gov. Follow the FTC on social media, read consumer alerts and the business blog, and sign up to get the latest FTC news and alerts.

1.4K views
26 replies
Tags:Negative reviews, Product reviews
300
Reply
user profile
Seller_ir2sdQjTkfjTh

Federal Trade Commission Announces Final Rule Banning Fake Reviews and Testimonials

Wasn't allowed to post the link to the FTC site.

I wonder now if Amazon will allow us to remove all the non-verified purchase reviews? The article states one standard for fake reviews is "who did not have actual experience with the business or its products or services"

The Federal Trade Commission today announced a final rule that will combat fake reviews and testimonials by prohibiting their sale or purchase and allow the agency to seek civil penalties against knowing violators.

“Fake reviews not only waste people’s time and money, but also pollute the marketplace and divert business away from honest competitors,” said FTC Chair Lina M. Khan. “By strengthening the FTC’s toolkit to fight deceptive advertising, the final rule will protect Americans from getting cheated, put businesses that unlawfully game the system on notice, and promote markets that are fair, honest, and competitive.”

The final rule announced today follows an advance notice of proposed rulemaking and a notice of proposed rulemaking announced in November 2022 and June 2023, respectively. The FTC also held an informal hearing on the proposed rule in February 2024. In response to public comments, the Commission made numerous clarifications and adjustments to its previous proposal.

The final rule prohibits:

Fake or False Consumer Reviews, Consumer Testimonials, and Celebrity Testimonials: The final rule addresses reviews and testimonials that misrepresent that they are by someone who does not exist, such as AI-generated fake reviews, or who did not have actual experience with the business or its products or services, or that misrepresent the experience of the person giving it. It prohibits businesses from creating or selling such reviews or testimonials. It also prohibits them from buying such reviews, procuring them from company insiders, or disseminating such testimonials, when the business knew or should have known that the reviews or testimonials were fake or false.

Buying Positive or Negative Reviews: The final rule prohibits businesses from providing compensation or other incentives conditioned on the writing of consumer reviews expressing a particular sentiment, either positive or negative. It clarifies that the conditional nature of the offer of compensation or incentive may be expressly or implicitly conveyed.

Insider Reviews and Consumer Testimonials: The final rule prohibits certain reviews and testimonials written by company insiders that fail to clearly and conspicuously disclose the giver’s material connection to the business. It prohibits such reviews and testimonials given by officers or managers. It also prohibits a business from disseminating such a testimonial that the business should have known was by an officer, manager, employee, or agent. Finally, it imposes requirements when officers or managers solicit consumer reviews from their own immediate relatives or from employees or agents – or when they tell employees or agents to solicit reviews from relatives and such solicitations result in reviews by immediate relatives of the employees or agents.

Company-Controlled Review Websites: The final rule prohibits a business from misrepresenting that a website or entity it controls provides independent reviews or opinions about a category of products or services that includes its own products or services.

Review Suppression: The final rule prohibits a business from using unfounded or groundless legal threats, physical threats, intimidation, or certain false public accusations to prevent or remove a negative consumer review. The final rule also bars a business from misrepresenting that the reviews on a review portion of its website represent all or most of the reviews submitted when reviews have been suppressed based upon their ratings or negative sentiment.

Misuse of Fake Social Media Indicators: The final rule prohibits anyone from selling or buying fake indicators of social media influence, such as followers or views generated by a bot or hijacked account. This prohibition is limited to situations in which the buyer knew or should have known that the indicators were fake and misrepresent the buyer’s influence or importance for a commercial purpose.

As the Commission noted previously, case-by-case enforcement without civil penalty authority might not be enough to deter clearly deceptive review and testimonial practices. The Supreme Court’s decision in AMG Capital Management LLC v. FTC has hindered the FTC’s ability to seek monetary relief for consumers under the FTC Act. This rule will enhance deterrence and strengthen FTC enforcement actions.

The Commission vote to approve the final rule and accompanying statement of basis and purpose was 5-0. The rule will become effective 60 days after the date it’s published in the Federal Register.

The primary staff members on this matter are Michael Ostheimer and Michael Atleson in the FTC’s Bureau of Consumer Protection.

The Federal Trade Commission works to promote competition and protect and educate consumers. The FTC will never demand money, make threats, tell you to transfer money, or promise you a prize. Learn more about consumer topics at consumer.ftc.gov, or report fraud, scams, and bad business practices at ReportFraud.ftc.gov. Follow the FTC on social media, read consumer alerts and the business blog, and sign up to get the latest FTC news and alerts.

Tags:Negative reviews, Product reviews
300
1.4K views
26 replies
Reply
user profile

Federal Trade Commission Announces Final Rule Banning Fake Reviews and Testimonials

by Seller_ir2sdQjTkfjTh

Wasn't allowed to post the link to the FTC site.

I wonder now if Amazon will allow us to remove all the non-verified purchase reviews? The article states one standard for fake reviews is "who did not have actual experience with the business or its products or services"

The Federal Trade Commission today announced a final rule that will combat fake reviews and testimonials by prohibiting their sale or purchase and allow the agency to seek civil penalties against knowing violators.

“Fake reviews not only waste people’s time and money, but also pollute the marketplace and divert business away from honest competitors,” said FTC Chair Lina M. Khan. “By strengthening the FTC’s toolkit to fight deceptive advertising, the final rule will protect Americans from getting cheated, put businesses that unlawfully game the system on notice, and promote markets that are fair, honest, and competitive.”

The final rule announced today follows an advance notice of proposed rulemaking and a notice of proposed rulemaking announced in November 2022 and June 2023, respectively. The FTC also held an informal hearing on the proposed rule in February 2024. In response to public comments, the Commission made numerous clarifications and adjustments to its previous proposal.

The final rule prohibits:

Fake or False Consumer Reviews, Consumer Testimonials, and Celebrity Testimonials: The final rule addresses reviews and testimonials that misrepresent that they are by someone who does not exist, such as AI-generated fake reviews, or who did not have actual experience with the business or its products or services, or that misrepresent the experience of the person giving it. It prohibits businesses from creating or selling such reviews or testimonials. It also prohibits them from buying such reviews, procuring them from company insiders, or disseminating such testimonials, when the business knew or should have known that the reviews or testimonials were fake or false.

Buying Positive or Negative Reviews: The final rule prohibits businesses from providing compensation or other incentives conditioned on the writing of consumer reviews expressing a particular sentiment, either positive or negative. It clarifies that the conditional nature of the offer of compensation or incentive may be expressly or implicitly conveyed.

Insider Reviews and Consumer Testimonials: The final rule prohibits certain reviews and testimonials written by company insiders that fail to clearly and conspicuously disclose the giver’s material connection to the business. It prohibits such reviews and testimonials given by officers or managers. It also prohibits a business from disseminating such a testimonial that the business should have known was by an officer, manager, employee, or agent. Finally, it imposes requirements when officers or managers solicit consumer reviews from their own immediate relatives or from employees or agents – or when they tell employees or agents to solicit reviews from relatives and such solicitations result in reviews by immediate relatives of the employees or agents.

Company-Controlled Review Websites: The final rule prohibits a business from misrepresenting that a website or entity it controls provides independent reviews or opinions about a category of products or services that includes its own products or services.

Review Suppression: The final rule prohibits a business from using unfounded or groundless legal threats, physical threats, intimidation, or certain false public accusations to prevent or remove a negative consumer review. The final rule also bars a business from misrepresenting that the reviews on a review portion of its website represent all or most of the reviews submitted when reviews have been suppressed based upon their ratings or negative sentiment.

Misuse of Fake Social Media Indicators: The final rule prohibits anyone from selling or buying fake indicators of social media influence, such as followers or views generated by a bot or hijacked account. This prohibition is limited to situations in which the buyer knew or should have known that the indicators were fake and misrepresent the buyer’s influence or importance for a commercial purpose.

As the Commission noted previously, case-by-case enforcement without civil penalty authority might not be enough to deter clearly deceptive review and testimonial practices. The Supreme Court’s decision in AMG Capital Management LLC v. FTC has hindered the FTC’s ability to seek monetary relief for consumers under the FTC Act. This rule will enhance deterrence and strengthen FTC enforcement actions.

The Commission vote to approve the final rule and accompanying statement of basis and purpose was 5-0. The rule will become effective 60 days after the date it’s published in the Federal Register.

The primary staff members on this matter are Michael Ostheimer and Michael Atleson in the FTC’s Bureau of Consumer Protection.

The Federal Trade Commission works to promote competition and protect and educate consumers. The FTC will never demand money, make threats, tell you to transfer money, or promise you a prize. Learn more about consumer topics at consumer.ftc.gov, or report fraud, scams, and bad business practices at ReportFraud.ftc.gov. Follow the FTC on social media, read consumer alerts and the business blog, and sign up to get the latest FTC news and alerts.

Tags:Negative reviews, Product reviews
300
1.4K views
26 replies
Reply
26 replies
26 replies
Quick filters
Sort by
user profile
Seller_4zBzdtgCyS9EI

well, at the very least you can take Amazon to court for violating law, if you report fake reviews and they ignore it.....

100
user profile
Seller_rI7BZIczK8iAC

Then, they will not only leave a rating or a review but BUY the product beforehand.... will be a bit more expensive for the cheating seller, but that is what wil happen. IMO that will eliminate about 70% of the false ratings, that's better than nothing.

60
user profile
Seller_9yQUzZAP34cYw

The FTC and anyone in government is on Amazon's payroll so it is unlikely anything will change. When you can make every government official a millionaire every month for the rest of their term, you get to do what you want.

210
user profile
Seller_BE3xPpZWhTS9Z

Note that part of this regulation includes penalties for businesses that suppress negative reviews. We may see this cited by Amazon as the reason they are unable to remove bad, fake reviews.

30
user profile
Seller_1oT4ZOwrSByEE

we had a fake review before we sold 1 unit of a brand new product, amazon refused to do anything.

170
user profile
Seller_WtOwWhtSrFjva

I think Jeff had a good ideal in the beginning. But with all the fake reviews and scammers, the idea is no longer doing what he intended.

With that being said, I think all reviews should be removed.

53
user profile
Seller_oDXVaydIpi3Hi

No, they'll just lie and return it, too. So the seller will get hit with return fees, damaged products, and bad reviews.

user profile
Seller_rI7BZIczK8iAC
will be a bit more expensive for the cheating seller, but that is what wil happen.
View post
10
user profile
Seller_phy2uq6HMLwRI

Somewhat reassuring,

but Amazon needs to remove all the reviews from sellers who started before 2019 or just before the pandemic.

I started my company during this time and the prior sellers should held to same standard as I have for reviews. It's a unfair that their fake review are allowed to stand as these grandfathered sellers from 2000's-2018 on the platform.

Prior sellers ratings should be reinitialized like all the new sellers who come onboard with the new review rules implemented by Amazon since 2019/2020.

I think it would only be fair to make every seller accountable from before from review point of view. Amazon should do a complete audit of old sellers and make them start fresh again on the review side to be in line and fair will all the new sellers since 2019/2020.

Cause we just cannot just compete with 1000s of reviews that were potentially fake from sellers gathered from before.

06
user profile
Seller_2srXkS44rN39i



[Moderator Edit: removed inappropriate commentary]

10
user profile
Seller_4zBzdtgCyS9EI

well, at the very least you can take Amazon to court for violating law, if you report fake reviews and they ignore it.....

100
user profile
Seller_4zBzdtgCyS9EI

well, at the very least you can take Amazon to court for violating law, if you report fake reviews and they ignore it.....

100
Reply
user profile
Seller_rI7BZIczK8iAC

Then, they will not only leave a rating or a review but BUY the product beforehand.... will be a bit more expensive for the cheating seller, but that is what wil happen. IMO that will eliminate about 70% of the false ratings, that's better than nothing.

60
user profile
Seller_rI7BZIczK8iAC

Then, they will not only leave a rating or a review but BUY the product beforehand.... will be a bit more expensive for the cheating seller, but that is what wil happen. IMO that will eliminate about 70% of the false ratings, that's better than nothing.

60
Reply
user profile
Seller_9yQUzZAP34cYw

The FTC and anyone in government is on Amazon's payroll so it is unlikely anything will change. When you can make every government official a millionaire every month for the rest of their term, you get to do what you want.

210
user profile
Seller_9yQUzZAP34cYw

The FTC and anyone in government is on Amazon's payroll so it is unlikely anything will change. When you can make every government official a millionaire every month for the rest of their term, you get to do what you want.

210
Reply
user profile
Seller_BE3xPpZWhTS9Z

Note that part of this regulation includes penalties for businesses that suppress negative reviews. We may see this cited by Amazon as the reason they are unable to remove bad, fake reviews.

30
user profile
Seller_BE3xPpZWhTS9Z

Note that part of this regulation includes penalties for businesses that suppress negative reviews. We may see this cited by Amazon as the reason they are unable to remove bad, fake reviews.

30
Reply
user profile
Seller_1oT4ZOwrSByEE

we had a fake review before we sold 1 unit of a brand new product, amazon refused to do anything.

170
user profile
Seller_1oT4ZOwrSByEE

we had a fake review before we sold 1 unit of a brand new product, amazon refused to do anything.

170
Reply
user profile
Seller_WtOwWhtSrFjva

I think Jeff had a good ideal in the beginning. But with all the fake reviews and scammers, the idea is no longer doing what he intended.

With that being said, I think all reviews should be removed.

53
user profile
Seller_WtOwWhtSrFjva

I think Jeff had a good ideal in the beginning. But with all the fake reviews and scammers, the idea is no longer doing what he intended.

With that being said, I think all reviews should be removed.

53
Reply
user profile
Seller_oDXVaydIpi3Hi

No, they'll just lie and return it, too. So the seller will get hit with return fees, damaged products, and bad reviews.

user profile
Seller_rI7BZIczK8iAC
will be a bit more expensive for the cheating seller, but that is what wil happen.
View post
10
user profile
Seller_oDXVaydIpi3Hi

No, they'll just lie and return it, too. So the seller will get hit with return fees, damaged products, and bad reviews.

user profile
Seller_rI7BZIczK8iAC
will be a bit more expensive for the cheating seller, but that is what wil happen.
View post
10
Reply
user profile
Seller_phy2uq6HMLwRI

Somewhat reassuring,

but Amazon needs to remove all the reviews from sellers who started before 2019 or just before the pandemic.

I started my company during this time and the prior sellers should held to same standard as I have for reviews. It's a unfair that their fake review are allowed to stand as these grandfathered sellers from 2000's-2018 on the platform.

Prior sellers ratings should be reinitialized like all the new sellers who come onboard with the new review rules implemented by Amazon since 2019/2020.

I think it would only be fair to make every seller accountable from before from review point of view. Amazon should do a complete audit of old sellers and make them start fresh again on the review side to be in line and fair will all the new sellers since 2019/2020.

Cause we just cannot just compete with 1000s of reviews that were potentially fake from sellers gathered from before.

06
user profile
Seller_phy2uq6HMLwRI

Somewhat reassuring,

but Amazon needs to remove all the reviews from sellers who started before 2019 or just before the pandemic.

I started my company during this time and the prior sellers should held to same standard as I have for reviews. It's a unfair that their fake review are allowed to stand as these grandfathered sellers from 2000's-2018 on the platform.

Prior sellers ratings should be reinitialized like all the new sellers who come onboard with the new review rules implemented by Amazon since 2019/2020.

I think it would only be fair to make every seller accountable from before from review point of view. Amazon should do a complete audit of old sellers and make them start fresh again on the review side to be in line and fair will all the new sellers since 2019/2020.

Cause we just cannot just compete with 1000s of reviews that were potentially fake from sellers gathered from before.

06
Reply
user profile
Seller_2srXkS44rN39i



[Moderator Edit: removed inappropriate commentary]

10
user profile
Seller_2srXkS44rN39i



[Moderator Edit: removed inappropriate commentary]

10
Reply