Amazon.Com Suing Fake Reviewers From Fiverr.Com

The Importance Of Reviews On Social Media And Sales Sites

It's Important To Note Amazon Is NOT Suing Fiverr.Com

This Isn't The First Crackdown

Who's Going Down And What Can You Expect If You Sold Fake Reviews?

Fake Amazon Reviews Being Sold On Fiverr.Com

More Fake Amazon Reviews Being Sold On Fiverr.Com

Fiverr Selle With 141 Positive Review For Fake Amazon Reviews

Amazon.Com Inc. has filed a lawsuit against over 1,000 Fiverr sellers selling fake reviews. For those of you who are not familiar with Fiverr.Com it's a website where sellers can sell anything from graphic design skills, SEO gigs, or just write funny songs. Everything on the site sells for $5 making it very affordable to get small freelance jobs done.For those of you not familiar with the concept of fake reviews, many freelance sites as well as individuals on sites like Craigslist, as well as those who own their own websites offer fake reviews to boost the credibility of various products and books.Fake reviews are nothing new, they have been going on for years. A few years back the FCC revised it's guidelines for disclosures required for bloggers or those on social media reviewing or advertising a product or service. If a company gives away a free product or pays for a review, the blogger or writer on a blog or social media must disclose the relationship as well as what was provided in a fairly detailed matter which is clearly visible and easy to see on the blog or review.An example of this would be if I was given a free phone charger by a company selling phone chargers and I was to leave a Amazon review for their product I would be required in the review to state that I was given a free product for the review. This notifies consumers thinking about buying that product that my review may be slightly biased.Reviews are incredibly important for products, businesses, and services. Reviews are important to businesses, restaurants, and products for a number of reasons. Firstly, they give a customer confidence in buying a product because they can read someone else's experience who had bought and used that product. Reviews are even more important on sites like Amazon.Com as they play a role in how your product ranks in searches.For example, if I'm selling a phone charger and I have 0 reviews, my product won't rank as well or be shown as much when buyers search for phone chargers. On the slip side a seller who has a combination of a lot of reviews and a lot of those reviews being positive, their product will rank higher and be shown more in Amazon searches as Amazon is trying to provide a good buying experience to shoppers and will be more likely to do so by showing products which many other buyers have been happy with.If anyone can just be paid to leave reviews it takes away the credibility of reviews. I may buy a phone charger which has many 5 star reviews, however if those reviews are purchased the product may suck and I may have inadvertantly bought an inferior product and even paid more money for that inferior product simply because the seller of that product paid $5 to buy some positive reviewsIt's important to note that Amazon.Com Inc is NOT suing the website Fiverr, it's suing some of it's users. This brings up the interesting question of should Fiverr have done more to stop fake reviews from being sold?If you want to see the list of the Fiverr Aliases listed in the lawsuit click the link below...It's important to note that selling fake reviews is against Fiverr's terms of service of (TOS). That said the Fiverr forums are full of Fiverr sellers complaining that many of the top rated sellers on Fiverr are those who break the rules, cheat the system, sell fake reviews which are in high demand, and make a lot of money.Many of these sellers in the Fiverr forum complain they've reported sellers violating Fiverr's TOS and reported sellers selling fake reviews but that nothing is done about it. In fairness to Fiverr eBay has tons of counterfeit merchandise being sold as well as items which violate US sanctions but they slip through and are able to be listed. Large websites like Fiverr and Amazon cannot possibly police the hundreds of thousands of sellers they have and even more reviews on their site.That said Fiverr does have a pretty sophisticated gig screening system. For example, if I'm selling a gig where I do something Youtube related, I can only use the term Youtube about 3 times in my gig description or they will block my gig from being created and posted. I'm assuming this is to prevent keyword stuffing. With technology like that one would assume they could fairly easily block reviews which contain words like Amazon in combination with the word review. You couldn't completely block the word Amazon as there's nothing wrong with a seller selling a gig such as "I will proof read your Amazon kindle book." Something like that would be completely acceptable, however when the word "review" is also included in that gig it's pretty clear what the gig is going to be about.For all I know Fiverr could be taking down tons of review gigs and suspending users, however there's not much to stop a seller from creating another "stealth account" and continuing their behavior.A few months ago the New York state's attourney setup a fake yoghurt shop in sting to catch fake reviwers, reviwers were fined as much as a coupe hundred thousand dollars a piece. Probably much more than they ever made selling fake reviews.Yelp has also gone after fake review sellers themselves.What makes this different however, is in the past the only people who ever really got cracked down on were those who actually setup websites and businesses selling fake reviews. They were the most visible and easy to go after. Most people assumed Fiverr sellers were safe as there was a third party involved and most were smaller time than a site setup solely to sell reviews.Many assumed that it was only a matter of time until companies either started suing Fiverr, comming after Fiverr sellers, or that Fiverr themselves started heavily policing these gigs. That time seems to have come as Amazon is suing over 1,000, I believe the actual number currently is about 1,114 "John Doe's" as Amazon does not yet know their names. It's a pretty sure bet however that Amazon will supoena records and get the IP addresses and identities of Fiverr sellers and in turn sue them individually.The funny thing about this whole crackdown, is that most likely the largest and most tech saavy sellers will probably escape unharmed, while the smaller less tech saavy review sellers will probably be the ones taken down. Why you ask?Well most large sellers have probably have a few Fiverr accounts shutdown for this behavior. They most likely just create a new profile, something many call a "stealth profile" using proxies or VPN's to change their IP address and essentially creating a fake identity and getting either a Fiverr card or setting up a Paypal account under a different name to receive their payments. These large tech saavy sellers are for all intents and purposes anonymous and won't be found.The sellers who will be found are the less tech saavy, small time review sellers who have maybe sold a handful to a dozen of gigs and are using their own origionial Fiverr profiles, with their own names and identities, and with their home or work IP addresses.So what can you do if you sold fake reviews? Really there's not much you can do but sit back and wait. If you were caught in this sting or crackdown, the damage is already done, you're pretty much just going to have to wait this out and see if your Fiverr account is shutdown or to receive some court documents either in your mailbox or e-mail from Amazon.Many Fiverr sellers are from outside of the USA in countries like Pakistan and the Phillipines. I doubt these sellers will face any lawsuits or backlash, however sellers based in the USA and Canada should be worried.In the meantime it would probably be wise for all Fiverr sellers who have fake review gigs up to pull them down immediately. As you can see, even at the time of this article being written 10/18/2015 at about 12:45 Central time, that Fiverr still has tons of fake reviews up not only for Amazon but Google, Yelp, and many other sites and services. Take a look at the screenshots below to see what I mean.The damage is done, if you've been caught you've already been caught, but it would be wise to pull down any fake review gigs you have as it's not only unethical, but also illegal, and can result in huge fines from the FCC, as well as huge lawsuits from sites like Amazon, Yelp, and Google.Do you have a comment on the sale of fake reviews? Leave a comment below and let us know what you think...