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Buzzillions and the Case of the Anonymous Reviewer

May 7th, 2009 janetherunner No comments

female-detective2One of the many hats that I wear as Review Manager at Buzzillions.com is a fedora.  My team makes it our business to detect and sniff at any suspicious reviews that come into our system – and let me tell you, that’s more than a few reviews. Individuals and companies are trying to game the system all the time!

I’ve been kind of quiet on the buzz blog for a while, but I wanted to chime in this week since review sites have been getting so much heat in the news. From the allegations against Yelp, to the Belkin scandal, to the most recent Amazon debacle, the media is looking to find the next shady review site. But they won’t find fodder for their next exposé on buzzillions.com. Not only do we post the good, the bad, and the ugly in our reviews, but we also go to great lengths to ensure that we represent those reviews in a way that is fair and transparent.

One review per-person, per-product

Unlike Yelp which uses an algorithm to suss-out reviews, all of our review quality assurance is done by a team right here in the office. Each day we search for duplicate reviews to take a first pass at the obvious offenders. We then comb through reviews in many different directions looking for unusual reviewer activity. Did we get 50 reviews by the same username in an hour? Did a particular product get 200 1-star reviews in a single day? Unusual behavior like this isn’t a surefire way to spot fraudulent reviews but cases like these raise red flags that prompt us to dive deeper into situation.

The purpose of my detective team is not to stifle user generated content – we certainly don’t want to stop someone writing lots of reviews for products that they own. But we want to uphold the ideal of one review per-person, per-product.

Verified Buyers

Our most powerful tool against review fraud is our Verified Buyer system. Any review that you see on Buzzillions with a Verified Buyer badge was written by someone who has actually bought the product. As a site built on user generated content, it is remarkable that we can take the doubt out of the equation for such a large number of our reviews.  This is also a brilliant way of addressing the issue of the Anonymous Reviewer.  Should people have the right to state their opinions about products and services without having to disclose their identity?  Most reviewers think so. But this is under hot debate from the ones reading reviews to the ones being reviewed: Can you trust an anonymous reviewer? Our Verified Buyer badge grants credibility to our reviews without forcing identity disclosure.

I have to hand it to the big guys like Yelp and Amazon for forging a path through the swamps of user generated content and teaching us how (and how not) to deal with the battles of free speech vs. inflammatory content and anonymity vs. trustworthiness. It’s no easy task.

So in the spirit of Buzzillions, which truly embraces our community of reviewers and all of their opinions (be they funny, edgy, glowing, or coarse), we rely on you, our readers, to help us become a better site. Mark helpful reviews so that the most useful ones stand out from the less constructive ones. And flag any review that appears to be a duplicate so we can whip out our trench coats and magnifying glasses and get on the case.

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The Yelp Scandal – Fact or Clever Hoax?

February 23rd, 2009 Tara No comments

There has been a lot of buzz lately about a recent article on Thursday in the East Bay Express, an alternative weekly in Emeryville, Calif,  In the article, owners of businesses who appear on Yelp claim that Yelp salespeople told them they could move bad reviews lower down on the page in exchange for advertising.   The article quotes some managers (some are anonymous) who said no to the offer, only to see their positive reviews mysteriously disappear while their negative ones move up the page.

Yelp swiftly denied participating in such practices, posting a response from their CEO on their site.  They took issue with the East Bay Express citing anonymous sources (no less than five) as well as the accusatory tone of the article.  Friday, the CEO wrote again about other articles backing him up.

Whether or not Yelp has or currently engages in the types of practices cited by the East Bay Express is not clear.  What is clear is that reviews in general – of products, of restaurants, of services, of anything really, are increasingly looked at with a degree of caution, perhaps even doubt.  Where are reviews coming from?  Were people paid to write them?  Can a manufacturer game the system?  While nothing is foolproof, Yelp is partially scrambling because they know, as do we, that when credibility crumbles, so does your business.

As I’ve posted about before (when writing about a recent scandal involving Belkin), Buzzillions employs a number of methods to ensure credibility.  Many of us here at Buzzillions, use both Buzzillions and Yelp, so we are watching this news story unfold, in the hopes it has more to tell us about how to protect our hard earned reputation.

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