- cross-posted to:
- technology@beehaw.org
- brainworms@lemm.ee
- upliftingnews@lemmy.world
- cross-posted to:
- technology@beehaw.org
- brainworms@lemm.ee
- upliftingnews@lemmy.world
Takes effect in October, finally some good news
Takes effect in October, finally some good news
Here’s one way to enforce it: the FTC could set up fronts that sell fake reviews. If anyone tries to buy fake reviews, the FTC busts them.
After doing this enough, companies will be suspicious of anyone selling fake reviews. Maybe suspicious enough to not risk buying them. Kind of like how it’s common knowledge that every supposed killer-for-hire is actually an FBI agent waiting to arrest you.
Eventually, nobody want to buy fake reviews. And when nobody wants to pay for them, they will disappear.
That…… could work.
That only works for 3rd party vendors.
Amazon doesn’t even bother and just does shady content filtering to make their products always appear first and show real reviews that they think will make you buy the product.
There’s a partial chance they can shadow ban reviews or screw with the total rating too, but I think they entice enough people to produce a passable rating, even if the product is subpar.
Still anything is a start, FTC been making rounds lately.
I don’t think Amazon is the one buying fake reviews, considering it has tried to sue the people who write them. But if they were, then the FTC could go after them too.
Well the ones that call themselves that are probably fbi agents.
The real ones likely don’t take walkins.
They have to find clients somehow. Whatever they are doing, the FTC can do.