The
Federal
Trade
Commission
has
charged
Sitejabber,
an
online
review
platform,
with
violating
its
new
fake
reviews
rules
by
using
point-of-sale
reviews
to
misrepresent
what
customers
think
about
products.
In
one
of
its
first
enforcement
actions
under
new
rules
banning
companies
from
making
or
selling
fake
reviews,
the
FTC
is
ordering
the
company
to
stop.
The
FTC
says
Sitejabber
“deceptively”
punched
up
businesses’
review
counts
by
incorporating
responses
to
point-of-sale
questionnaires
asking
customers
to
rate
and
review
their
shopping
experience,
before
they’d
actually
gotten
any
products
or
services.
It
also
alleges
that
by
giving
its
clients
tools
to
publish
that
feedback
on
their
own
sites,
Sitejabber
enabled
them
to
mislead
people
to
think
the
ratings
and
reviews
were
based
on
actual
experience
with
what
the
companies
were
selling.
The
FTC
now
forbids
Sitejabber
from
“misrepresenting,
or
assisting
anyone
else
in
misrepresenting”
that
such
reviews
are
based
on
customer
experience
with
a
product
or
service.
The
company
is
also
barred
from
helping
other
companies
misrepresent
the
reviews
that
“it
collects,
moderates,
or
displays.”
The
regulator’s
new
anti-fake
review
rules,
which
went
into
effect
last
month,
aim
to
address
AI-generated
reviews
online,
including
on
Amazon
and
other
e-commerce
sites.
The
FTC
prohibits
a
swath
of
deceptive
practices,
such
as
offering
incentives
to
leave
feedback
or
creating
a
fake
review
website
that
seems
independent
but
is
actually
owned
by
the
very
company
that
makes
the
products
being
reviewed.
Or
at
least,
it
will
for
the
next
couple
of
months,
after
which
the
next
US
President
will
be
sworn
in
and
(probably)
replace
its
leadership
—
and
we’ll
see
what
happens
next.
(Originally posted by Wes Davis)
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