Tired of falling for fake reviews? The Federal Trade Commission is looking to make rules to fine people who write them and is asking the public to weigh in with comments.
The FTC began exploring in November last year whether fake reviews, payment for positive reviews and suppressing negative reviews were worthy of a civil penalty. The hope is that the fines alone will deter people from making fake reviews, which in the long run will benefit consumers and marketers.
Samuel Levine, director of the FTC’s consumer protection bureau, said the rule "should help level the playing field for honest companies.”
“Our proposed rule on fake reviews shows that we’re using all available means to attack deceptive advertising in the digital age,” he said.
Last year, Fashion Nova settled to pay the FTC $4.2 million over allegations that it blocked negative reviews on their website. The FTC said the company suppressed reviews that rated products less than four out of five stars, used a third-party tool that automatically posted high reviews on the website, and required that anything less than a three-star rating required company approval.
This was the FTC’s first case involving a company’s efforts to conceal negative reviews.
And while there are multiple reports indicating the prevalence of fake reviews on sites like Yelp, TripAdvisor, Google and Walmart.com, there is a growing concern about the use of artificial intelligence to create reviews, according to the FTC.
And fake reviews cost consumers money. According to a paper presented last year to the National Bureau of Economic Research, researchers found that fake reviews lead consumers to buy lower-quality products, costing 12 cents for each dollar spent.
The FTC is seeking comment on the following proposed rules to fight fake reviews:
The FTC received 42 public comments for the November 2022 proposal from individual consumers, small businesses, review platforms, consumer advocacy groups and academic researchers. Of the received comments, 29 supported the proposed rulemaking, four said it was unnecessary, and the remaining didn't address the question or express a clear view.
Though popular rating sites like Yelp and Google each have their own protocols to fight fake reviews, they favored the proposed regulation and submitted comments in January.
Google uses automation and human operators to remove fake reviews and believes the FTC's proposed regulations can help complement their efforts, they said in a submitted comment. In June, the company announced it filed a lawsuit against Ethan QiQi Hu, founder of Rafadigital, alleging he posted more than 350 business profiles and tried to bolster them with more than 14,000 fake reviews.
Yelp supports civil penalties for people who write or pay for deceptive reviews, or who engage in other deceptive practices related to reviews. Yelp also uses technology and human moderation to fight fake reviews and notifies the FTC and other regulators about deceptive review conduct its has found on its site, said Aaron Schur, Yelp’s General Counsel in a statement to USA TODAY.
Fake Review Watch, which monitors online platforms for review fraud, commented that the "review platforms themselves bear the responsibility for the massive problem of fake reviews." It recommended that platforms show whether a business had fake reviews removed, which pushes for more transparency for the consumer.
The Better Business Bureau offers consumers tips on how to spot whether a review is real or fake:
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