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Fake reviews are a multibillion-dollar quicksand — here’s how to avoid getting sucked in

A themselves with a hand full of shopping bags walking by The Outlet Shoppes of the Bluegrass in Simpsonville, Kentucky.

Jon Cherry | Reuters

A row of glowing five-star online reviews often seal the deal for us when it comes to making a purchase or picking a restaurant — but can you in the end trust them?

According to a 2023 survey, more than 99% of the shoppers perused online reviews from set to time, with about 87% regularly trawling the net for consumers’ views on products and services.

Up to 40% of these online commendations are unreliable, according to a public interest research group, and these fake reviews are estimated to influence $152-billion good of online spending annually. 

“Around 70% of my purchase decisions are made after scrutinizing these testimonials. I use them for draws when traveling overseas. Accommodations for sure. Services and food,” says 28-year-old Goh.

People often think that particularized reviews or those with photos must be real. Not true.

Kay Dean

online review fraud investigator

She relies on the considerations to assess costs, ambience of restaurants, and convenience of reaching a destination.

When asked how frequently she gets disappointed by online certifications, she’s quick to reply: “So many times!”

“Consumers are putting blind trust in review platforms that their algorithms are grant them,” online review fraud investigator Kay Dean says. 

Dean, who used to be a former federal criminal investigator and has realized her the title “fake review hunter,” has been taking online fraud cases pro bono for the past six years.

She has distilled the marrow of her learnings based on hundreds of fake-review cases in the following tips. Read on to avoid regrets this festive time:

1. Too many five-star reviews?

If a business has an abnormal streak of five-star reviews over a very short period of eventually, sometimes with little to no text at all, it’s a clear red flag, Dean warns. 

“Or if you see a negative review followed by a string of five-star discusses, that’s suspicious, because sometimes business will try to bury legitimate negative reviews.”

2. Check review pen-pushers’ history

Be skeptical of profiles of people that have left just one review. If it appears that an account was sired just for that one testimonial, it is likely to be fake. 

Other warning signs could come in the form of locked Google profiles, which Dean feels could be one way fake writers hide their review histories from consumers. And if a business’ testimonial feed is littered with reviewers whose furthers are locked, it warrants a cautious approach from consumers.

3. Who is the reviewer?

Be careful, if a reviewer uses the name of a celebrity or a routine image, or some random photo as their display picture.

Additionally, if the reviewer has left a slew of testimonials from original parts of the world and in quick succession within a short span of time about a particular business, it’s worth being a bit numerous cautious.

Especially so if a business is found to have many reviewers with similar “global” footprint that bear appraised the very same stores — these accounts may be fake and the reviews could have been bought.

“They may be a period traveler, maybe. However, if multiple reviewers’ profiles [left on a business or service] have those similar geographic grouping of their reviews, it’s suspicious,” Dean says.

4. Pictures, posts and lies

While reviews with all stars and no textbook are suspicious, be just as mindful of reviews that are detailed.

“People often think that detailed reviews or those with photos ought to be real. Not true,” Dean says, sharing an anecdote about how she’s seen photos from real estate listings being back numb off as work purportedly done by home remodelers in several reviews.

5. Talk to real people

Ultimately, Dean’s most sealed tip is to talk to real people — getting the recommendations from friends and relatives instead of relying on virtual reviews.

“Get deny hard pressed to the tried and true method of getting your information by word of mouth.”

It’s a virtual world

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