How do you spot a fake online review?


Britainโ€™s competition watchdog has vowed to tackle fake and misleading online reviews โ€œhead onโ€ as it launched investigations into firms including Just Eat and Autotrader.

The Competition and Markets Authority (CMA) said reviews are used by 90% of consumers when they buy over the internet and play a large part in the UKโ€™s over ยฃ200 billion online retail sector.

But up to 50% of online reviews are fake, according to recent research by tech firm Truth Engine.

The CMA said its latest action against firms comes as part of a clampdown on fake and misleading reviews as shoppers increasingly rely on customer feedback when shopping online.

Emma Cochrane, executive director for consumer protection at the CMA, told the Press Association: โ€œItโ€™s so important that consumers can have trust in those reviews because we know that nine in 10 of us rely on them when weโ€™re shopping, and that retail shopping in the UK is billions of pounds worth a year.

โ€œItโ€™s so important that consumers can have trust and confidence when theyโ€™re shopping online.โ€

Here are the CMAโ€™s tips for spotting and avoiding fake reviews:

โ€“ Read the reviews

Shoppers often get taken in by five-star ratings without actually reading what people have to say about a product or service.

โ€œYouโ€™ll be surprised at how many reviews sound dubious, overly vague or even totally unrelated to the item theyโ€™re supposedly endorsing,โ€ the CMA said.

โ€“ Be alert to AI-generated reviews

Artificial intelligence (AI) can be used to make fake reviews sound fluent, polished and highly convincing.

โ€œIf a review feels a bit too slick, reads like itโ€™s been perfectly crafted, or uses very similar wording to others, it may not reflect a real customerโ€™s experience,โ€ the CMA warned.

โ€“ Take a look at the other ratings

Look beyond the five-star ratings.

Three or four-star reviews are less likely to be fake, and they can be more useful to give a genuine, overall assessment.

โ€“ Check out multiple sites

Looking across several sites can help shoppers see patterns and provide a more consistent picture.

โ€œCheck a few different review sites. If youโ€™re seeing the same kind of reviews coming up again and again, itโ€™s more likely to be fake,โ€ said Ms Cochrane.

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