Amazon sues thousands of Facebook group administrators over fake reviews

Amazon sues thousands of Facebook group administrators over fake reviews


Packages move along a conveyor at an Amazon fulfillment center on Cyber Monday in Robbinsville, New Jersey, U.S., on Monday, Nov. 29, 2021.

Michael Nagle | Bloomberg | Getty Images

Amazon on Tuesday filed a lawsuit against the administrators of more than 10,000 Facebook groups that allegedly acted as fake review brokers.

The lawsuit filed in King County Superior Court in Seattle accuses the group admins of soliciting reviews for items in exchange for money or free products. One of the groups, “Amazon Product Review,” had over 43,000 members, and allegedly offered refunds or other payment to buyers willing to leave bogus reviews on products like camera tripods and car stereos.

Another group, called “Amazon Varified Buyer & Seller,” had over 2,500 members, the complaint said. Administrators allegedly sought out fake reviews, and offered them to Amazon sellers, charging $10 per review, according to screenshots of Facebook messages included in the complaint.

Facebook parent company Meta has taken down half of the more than 10,000 groups reported by Amazon, and continues to investigate others, Amazon said.

The case represents Amazon’s latest effort to root out fake reviews on its sprawling third-party marketplace. The marketplace now accounts for more than half of e-commerce sales and has helped the company bring in record revenue. But fake reviews have become more severe as Amazon’s online marketplace has grown to amass millions of third-party merchants. Bad actors often seek to boost their product ratings or search ranking by soliciting fake reviews.

It’s unclear who is running the Facebook groups. Amazon said it filed the lawsuit in order to learn their identities, shut down the groups and compel them to return their “ill-gotten gains from brokering fake reviews,” according to the complaint.

Amazon said it has internal teams that scope out fake review purveyors. The teams work with Facebook to close the groups. “Nonetheless, new Facebook groups offering fake reviews continue to appear,” the complaint states.

Many of the Facebook groups are private, and require potential new members to provide proof that they’re an Amazon seller or reviewer in order to be admitted. Posters will often try to evade detection by Facebook’s moderators by obfuscating the phrase “Refund after review” and instead typing “R**fund Aftr R**vew.”

Amazon has previously said it uses a combination of machine-learning tools and human moderators to try to curb fake reviews. It’s also asked other social media companies to step in and assist, as fake-review communities have flourished in Facebook groups and in messaging apps like Telegram, WhatsApp and WeChat.

WATCH: Amazon is filled with fake reviews and it’s getting harder to spot them



Source

Wikipedia founder Jimmy Wales isn’t worried about Elon Musk’s Grokipedia:  ‘Not optimistic he will create anything very useful right now’
Technology

Wikipedia founder Jimmy Wales isn’t worried about Elon Musk’s Grokipedia: ‘Not optimistic he will create anything very useful right now’

Elon Musk’s Wikipedia rival Grokipedia got off to a “rocky start” in its public debut, but Wikipedia founder Jimmy Wales didn’t even have to take a look at the AI’s output to know what he expected. “I’m not optimistic he will create anything very useful right now,” Wales said at the CNBC Technology Executive Council […]

Read More
Meta’s AI app has seen growth soar since launch of Vibes, but trails OpenAI’s Sora
Technology

Meta’s AI app has seen growth soar since launch of Vibes, but trails OpenAI’s Sora

Mark Zuckerberg, chief executive officer of Meta Platforms Inc., wears a pair of Meta Oakley Vanguard AI glasses during the Meta Connect event in Menlo Park, California, US, on Wednesday, Sept. 17, 2025. David Paul Morris | Bloomberg | Getty Images Meta’s AI app has seen a major jolt in downloads since launching its Vibes […]

Read More
We’re raising our Corning price target after a shortsighted post-earnings decline
Technology

We’re raising our Corning price target after a shortsighted post-earnings decline

Shares of high-tech glass maker Corning dropped 2.5% on Tuesday after climbing more than 80% this year. Investors took profits after what were solid earnings. We weren’t among them. In fact, we bought the pullback on Tuesday morning, shortly after underserved post-earnings weakness developed. Corning makes specialty glass for data center cables and screens for […]

Read More