07-29-2020, 04:50 AM
This is Amazon review manipulation: https://www.dailymail.co.uk/sciencetech/...users.html
1) Seller needs 5-star reviews.
2) Seller sets up shill buyer account(s).
3) Seller/buyer uses list of Amazon customers.
4) Seller buys own products and ships to #3 through #2.
5) Seller/buyer leaves 5-star reviews for their product using their #2 accounts. (The buyer leaves reviews, not "gift recipients" of the product).
This is a known problem with Amazon review manipulation. We received a "gift" ourselves once. If the complete supply chain from seller-buyer-recipient is within the Amazon chain it tricks the algorithms into thinking the reviews are legitimate, so the seller can generate as many 5-star reviews as they want to.
1) Seller needs 5-star reviews.
2) Seller sets up shill buyer account(s).
3) Seller/buyer uses list of Amazon customers.
4) Seller buys own products and ships to #3 through #2.
5) Seller/buyer leaves 5-star reviews for their product using their #2 accounts. (The buyer leaves reviews, not "gift recipients" of the product).
This is a known problem with Amazon review manipulation. We received a "gift" ourselves once. If the complete supply chain from seller-buyer-recipient is within the Amazon chain it tricks the algorithms into thinking the reviews are legitimate, so the seller can generate as many 5-star reviews as they want to.