The big picture: Yelp is the new battleground for political warfare
The big
picture: Yelp is the new battleground for political warfare
With the press of a button, users can remotely post
reviews of businesses or rate them with low star counts when they are embroiled
in media controversies. The Red Hen in Lexington, VA is the most recent victim
of this behavior, receiving 15,000 false reviews after the restaurant asked
White House Press Secretary Sarah Sanders to leave the restaurant.
Why
it matters: When these
illegitimate postings take over, they have a real impact on businesses.
Meanwhile, the regulation of reviews falls on the shoulders of companies like
Yelp, which have been criticized for not doing enough to banish fake posts from
their site
- The Red Hen made waves last weekend when co-owner Stephanie Wilkinson asked
White House Press Secretary Sarah Sanders to leave the establishment. Yelp
is now parsing through 15,000 reviews of the restaurant, up from less than
100 before the incident. Many even posted poor reviews for restaurants
named The Red Hen in other locations,
even though they have no affiliation.
- Obama's
bear hug: A pizzeria
with only two reviews (both five stars) came into the spotlight after
their owner posted a picture with then-president Barack Obama. Yelp had to
remove 200 fraudulent comments, both positive and negative.
- "Pizzagate": In 2016, conspiracy theorists suspected the owner of Comet
Pizza in D.C. of working with then-presidential nominee Hillary Clinton
and her campaign chairman John Podesta to run a child-slavery ring in the
restaurant's basement. The theory was repeatedly debunked, but the
restaurant took a sustained hit on Yelp and Facebook, and a gunman entered
and fired an AR-15.
- "Checking in": More than a million Facebook users "checked
in" on the site at Standing Rock Reservation, where protestors
tried to block the construction of the Dakota Access Pipeline. Rumors had
circulated that police were targeting users who had checked in, but the
police department dismissed them as completely false.
How
it works: Companies like Yelp, Facebook,
and Google are all vulnerable to media-fueled fake activity.
- To fight it, Yelp deploys an "Active
Cleanup Alert," in which their support team flags and removes fraudulent
reviews.
- In a statement to
Wired, a Google representative said that they also have a team that
identifies incidents of fake reviews, and uses automated and manual
screening to sift them out.
- Yes, but: These
companies must try to strike a neutral attitude in managing postings.
Several platforms, Facebook
in particular, have been accused of favoring liberal voices when
removing content from their sites. All big social media companies still
use teams of people in conjunction with algorithms to address these issues
because of the nuanced nature of human activity and media controversy.
Don't
forget: While politically-motivated
online actions (sometimes called "slacktivism") often seem empty, bad
reviews can result in real danger for those targeted.
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