Thousands of fake customer reviews are found on Amazon
A lot of tech products on Amazon are boosted by product reviews that appear to be fake
A new investigation by a British consumer education group, called Which?, found a lot of tech categories on Amazon are flooded with products from virtually unknown brands, all boosted by product reviews that appear to be fake, reports CNN.
The Which? investigation dug into the lineup of cameras, smart watches, headphones, fitness trackers and other small tech items offered on Amazon and unearthed some fishy details:
- Some of the top-rated brands in different categories were brands tech experts had never heard of, like Ktaoism, Gejin, ZagZog and Vogek.
- A bulk of the reviews on questionable products were from unverified purchasers. (In an effort to combat the widespread problem of fake product reviews online, Amazon has a “Verified Purchase Review” program, where the company indicates what reviews are written by people who actually purchased the product and did so without significant discount or incentive from the seller. Unverified reviews can still be published, but don’t bear Amazon’s seal of approval).
- Of these unverified reviews, a significant portion of them were perfect 5-star reviews.
- Finally, large floods of these unverified, unanimously perfect reviews “arrived on a product listing on the same day, or in a short space of time,” according to Which? “This sort of activity often involved duplication or repetition of reviews. We even found instances of positive reviews for entirely different products appearing on a listing.”
CNN has reached out to Amazon for comment. “Even one inauthentic review is one too many,” the company told Which? “We have clear participation guidelines for both reviewers and selling partners and we suspend, ban, and take legal action on those who violate our policies.”
More Amazon news
Amazon expands its fleet
Amazon is reducing reliance on third-party carriers. Amazon's famous drones have yet to deliver much of anything, but its jets are a different story. After launching Prime Air in 2016 with 40 jets, the company appears to have renamed it "Amazon Air" and added 10 more...
Sex, booze, or Amazon?
Millennials pick Amazon over sex: survey According to New York Post, a new survey revealed 77 percent of millennials would go without booze for a year rather than quit Amazon, and 44 percent would forego sex. The survey, conducted by Max Borges Agency, also uncovered...
Amazon moves to South Park
“South Park” pokes fun at Amazon “South Park” pokes fun at Amazon, portraying Jeff Bezos as a sinister, giant-headed supervillain. The episode also satirized reports of working conditions at Amazon's warehouses. The episode, titled "Unfulfilled" in an apparent...