Web of Lies?

1

Category : News

An evaluation of the scale and consequences of the growth of unverifiable, false and malicious online reviews.

You run a reputable business. Your customers say nice things about you. Then one day you find that someone is saying something that is very far from nice – and that anyone trying to find out about you and your business is likely to read it and believe it.

KwikChex.com, an online reputation verification business has been carrying out extensive research on the problem.

The conclusion is that it is widespread, growing, and extremely damaging – and it is being exacerbated by the products of some very large brands, including Google and McAfee.

Here are just a few examples of what is on the web at the moment:

About a Hairdressing Salon in Florida, USA:

The salon IS owned by husband and wife and althought (sic) prices cannot be beat the owner conducts himself in an inappropriate manner! He mixes his own solution in the back using mostly formaldehyde and constantly offers free massages to UNDERAGE girls! He is so sleezy!!!(sic)’

About a High School in New York

‘My brother is a 10th grader involved with heroin injecting and crack/ marijuana because of the crazy stress..SEND your kids here if you wanna RUIN THEM.’

About a DJ business in Melbourne Australia

‘The worst of the worst! The DJ you provided hands down ruined my wedding. Very unprofessional company. Full of lies and have no idea what they are doing. I have never seen a company write reviews for themselves! My husband fell for it and we paid for it on my most special day!’

About a Michelin starred, celebrity chef-owned London Restaurant

‘Shockingly poor  - horrendous service followed by mediocre food. We left after the starter as it took 40 minutes and still no main course had arrived. Not only that but we had asked 5 staff when it would be coming and no one came back to apologise. This was after spending over £150 on wine alone. Pathetic! Go to the River Cafe for a better Italian experience‎.’

These all appear on Google Reviews. (On Google Maps).  Such reviews can be posted anonymously by anyone – and even though there is no verification process and the owners absolutely refute them, requests to Google to have them removed have been ignored or denied.

And it’s not only Google that enables such online malice in the apparent pursuit of ‘consumer awareness’ – nor is it confined to small businesses and high schools.

The following appears as a review on the McAfee SiteAdvisor review for the official site of the UK Labour Party – the elected government party:

This web site spams using third (party) various online marketing companies. It also has a list of convicted child perverts within its ranks who like passing photographs of kids to party members. Best to avoid this web site, as their messages are 80% lies.’

Or, again from McAfee Site Advisor, this review for Microsoft’s website:

if you access this domain you risk to unwillingly download and install malicious software (virus, Trojans, spyware, etc) that may damage your computer’.

The Google and McAfee review systems get a dose of their own medicine too – with reviewers using their own systems to both maliciously attack the companies and to complain about these very issues.

Here are a few examples:

Google Map Reviews on Google (HQ)

‘HOW CAN ANYONE LIKE GOOGLE STAY IN BUSINESS I SPOKE TO ONE OF THERE (sic) REPS YESTERDAY HE WAS RUDE TO ME SWORE AT ME THEN TALKED ABOUT HOW HE AND SOME OF HIS CO WORKERS ENJYOED (sic) BEING PEDO….  (sic) WELL I CANT EVEN FINISH THE STATEMENT I AM SO DISGUSTED I JUST HOPE THERES NOT A DAY CARE THERE’‎

‘Why does Google Maps allow postings in this area? What has it got to do with searching for a location? They do not check for slander FIRST. They just allow people to post what they want. We have a wrong posting on our map location and we have asked google now over and over to remove this FALSE statement made by this person. We spend a lot of money with Google Adwords for both businesses that we run, and to see this terrible service from Google is a JOKE! They don’t reply back to your flagging, they don’t remove it when it is SLANDER. Lets post about Google – they charge you a lot of money in their Google Adwords and you don’t even come up to the top hits when you pay for this service. They charge too much for their terrible service.‎’

Reviews on McAfee SiteAdvisor – about McAfee SiteAdvisor

‘THEY DON’T PROTECT YOU FROM SITE THAT ARE NOTHING BUT FRAUDULENT SITES. ‘

‘People here seem to be creating multiple accounts just to spam other sites with fake reviews and people might probably believe them?’

‘Good Reviews’

There is also overwhelming evidence of fraudulent good reviews. The majority are posted to fool consumers into doing business with scammers. Many, though are now being placed to counter false bad reviews that businesses are having difficulty removing – several businesses that have contacted KwikChex have admitted to this tactic – and below is another post on the Google HQ reviews that claims that Google employees encourage this practice.

‘I wrote letters to Google and made several phone calls about a problem with their map review service. I never received a reply back Google eventually emailed me about the issue but declined to help saying they could do nothing and I should get my buddies to write bogus positive reviews to counter act a bad review left by a nut job out to cause harm to my business.

The research also revealed the following comment on a ‘This site is good’ McAfee SiteAdvisor review regarding the Ku Klux Clan official website:

If you breed with blacks or Mexicans you’re actually breeding backwards. But that’s just science.’

In fact, posting fake good reviews can lead to prosecution, as was demonstrated last year when the New York attorney general’s office prosecuted Lifestyle Lift, a cosmetic surgery company when evidence emerged that they had instructed employees to file good reviews. They settled the case with a payment of $300,000. And Andrew M. Cuomo, New York’s attorney general, said in a statement that Lifestyle Lift’s

“attempt to generate business by duping consumers was cynical, manipulative and illegal.”

It is illegal in many counties, including throughout the European Union – but this is not stopping the growth, as it seems that awareness amongst consumers and businesses about the laws already in place is very limited. And as long as review sites allow anonymity and make little or no attempt to verify reviews, the process of law will continue to be obstructed and the problem will inevitably keep on growing.

The Scale and Significance of the Problem

The KwikChex research identified thousands of review and complaints sites – and still it was only the tip of the iceberg. (A Google search using ‘review sites for businesses’ stated that about 196 million results had been found and whilst the majority will be duplicates, it still highlights the scale of the issue).

Many, like Google Map Reviews, McAfee SiteAdvisor and Yelp are very big names, carrying millions of reviews. Some try harder than others to guard against abuse – but the overwhelming conclusion is that far from helping consumers, the spread of such sites and lack of verification of the truthfulness of the reviews causes more confusion and doubt – and is certainly capable of ruining the reputation of many very good businesses, many of whom will not even be aware that they are being attacked. In effect, it means that millions of good reviews could have been placed in a clear attempt to defraud consumers and millions of bad reviews could have been placed by competitors, disgruntled former employees or others with a personal agenda.

Solutions

Following the research, which was conducted to assist KwikChex in providing the best way to identify, verify, promote and defend the world’s best businesses and help protect consumers, KwikChex is launching a range of initiatives and services, including.

This website – centre of the Feedblack Campaign – Feedblack is the campaign name and term being used by KwikChex to identify and rectify the problem of false and malicious reviews and accusations and can be used by consumers and businesses to report all suspected cases.

The Authenticated Review System. It enables KwikChex to robustly verify the authenticity of customer reviews whilst protecting the privacy of reviewers. The system has already been developed for various sectors and countries and is currently being implemented. KwikChex is now contacting review sites to request cooperation. We are also seeking approval (via evaluation and monitoring) from government departments across the world that will provide increased reassurance for consumers.

KwikChex Monitor – a part of the KwikChex Gold membership that keeps track and sends alerts of any web content that mentions your business. Not just your main brand, but your executives, your sub-brands, and even your competition and suppliers.

All of the above are part of the KwikChex.com verification and protection service.

Join our facebook campaign ‘Web of Lies’ to rid the web of fake and malicious online reviews – Click here

For more information and enquiries, please contact info@kwikchex.com

{ FeedBlack }

Category : News

{ FeedBlack }

{ is the new term for unverified and often anonymous online feedback }
FeedBlckNumerous sites have appeared whose stated intentions are to provide opinions from the public that are meant to guide the public on which businesses to deal with and what websites to visit.

The public are often advised to type in to a search engine the word ‘complaints’ after a website or business name, but in reality the results can be totally misleading, with the potential purpose to maliciously deceive. The comments can be posted by competitors, disgruntled employees – anyone – and they still get published, often without the knowledge of the business being accused. Even good reviews can be bad for the public as they can be placed by website owners themselves.

The potential damage and the confusion being caused may become greater if a tool quietly launched by Google last September catches on. Called Google Sidewiki, it enables anyone who has downloaded the Google toolbar to post comments on any website which are then visible to all with the toolbar facility when they visit any site that has a Sidewiki posting. The full implications of this could be immense and will be the subject of a special KwikChex report to be published shortly.

Feedblack is a danger to consumers as its unproven nature can and will mislead. It is also a danger to perfectly respectable businesses.

KwikChex is helping to resolve these issues by providing a fully verified reputation and consumer reassurance service. Members are comitted to ‘Best On The Web’ practices.

In order to undo the damage caused by Feedblack, members can post on unverified review sites and tools, such as Google Sidewiki, the following statement:

‘This business is a member of KwikChex, the leading reputation and public reassurance service. KwikChex members commit to ‘Best On The Web’ practices which are independently verified and their profile is available on KwikChex.com

KwikChex supports online information, feedback and comments that are verifiable and campaigns against unsubstantiated postings by anonymous individuals that have malicious intent or that are intended to mislead the public.