A Blog by Jonathan Low

 

Oct 19, 2015

Amazon Sues More Than 1,000 Sellers of Fake Product Reviews

On a positive note, it is a commentary on the strength of such reviews and the commercial activity they supplement that their economic impact appears strong enough to support a market on which buyers and sellers of reviews can connect. JL

Jackie Wattles reports in CNN/Money:

"In at least one instance, the seller of a 'Verified Review' was willing to receive an empty envelop, not the product itself, simply to create a shipping record," the court filing says.
The online reseller is suing more than 1,000 people who are "misleading Amazon's customers" by selling "fake reviews of products," according to a complaint the company filed in a Seattle court on Friday.
The lawsuit targets account holders on Fiverr.com, a marketplace for odd-jobs where "gigs" are sold for $5 and up. Amazon (AMZN, Tech30) doesn't know who is behind the accounts so lists them all as "John Doe" in the suit.
Amazon sued several websites in April for selling false reviews. It said most of those sites have been shut down, and it described the new suit against individual reviewers as the next step.
"Most of the defendants offer positive or 5-star reviews for Amazon sellers' products. Indeed, many encourage the Amazon seller to create the text for their own reviews," the complaint reads.
Amazon's terms of use ban fake reviews, and it's suing for breach of contract and violating Washington's consumer protection laws.
Court documents say Amazon conducted an "extensive investigation" into the Fiverr users. It claims some tried to dodge Amazon.com's review controls by posting from different accounts and IP addresses.


"In at least one instance, the seller of a 'Verified Review' was willing to receive an empty envelop, not the product itself, simply to create a shipping record," the court filing says.
Fiverr declined to say whether it will cooperate in the case but said "we actively remove services that violate our terms of use"
"The challenge of merchants soliciting illegitimate reviews is one that faces all marketplaces and online platforms," Fiverr said in a statement. "In fact, in our own marketplace we restrict reviews to only those who we can verify have actually purchased a service."
Amazon spokesperson Julie Law said the company uses "a number of mechanisms to detect and remove the small fraction of reviews that violate our guidelines."
"We terminate accounts that abuse the system and we take legal action," Lew said.

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