AI Smackdown: How a New FTC Rule Also Fights Fake Product Reviews (salon.com) 29
Salon looks closer at a new $51,744-per-violation AI regulation officially approved one month ago by America's FTC — calling it a financial blow "If you're a digital media company whose revenue comes from publishing AI-generated articles and fake product reviews.
But they point out the rules also ban "product review suppression." Per the ruling, that means it's a violation for "anyone to use an unfounded or groundless legal threat, a physical threat, intimidation, or a public false accusation in response to a consumer review... to (1) prevent a review or any portion thereof from being written or created, or (2) cause a review or any portion thereof to be removed, whether or not that review or a portion thereof is replaced with other content."
Finally... The rule makes it a violation for a business to "provide compensation or other incentives in exchange for, or conditioned expressly or by implication on, the writing or creation of consumer reviews expressing a particular sentiment, whether positive or negative, regarding the product, service or business...." [T]he new rule also prevents secretly advertising for yourself while pretending to be an independent outlet or company. It bars "the creation or operation of websites, organizations or entities that purportedly provide independent reviews or opinions of products or services but are, in fact, created and controlled by the companies offering the products or services."
In an earlier statement, FTC Consumer Protection Bureau head Sam Levine, said the new rule "should help level the playing field for honest companies. We're using all available means to attack deceptive advertising in the digital age," he said.
Thanks to long-time Slashdot reader mspohr for sharing the article.
But they point out the rules also ban "product review suppression." Per the ruling, that means it's a violation for "anyone to use an unfounded or groundless legal threat, a physical threat, intimidation, or a public false accusation in response to a consumer review... to (1) prevent a review or any portion thereof from being written or created, or (2) cause a review or any portion thereof to be removed, whether or not that review or a portion thereof is replaced with other content."
Finally... The rule makes it a violation for a business to "provide compensation or other incentives in exchange for, or conditioned expressly or by implication on, the writing or creation of consumer reviews expressing a particular sentiment, whether positive or negative, regarding the product, service or business...." [T]he new rule also prevents secretly advertising for yourself while pretending to be an independent outlet or company. It bars "the creation or operation of websites, organizations or entities that purportedly provide independent reviews or opinions of products or services but are, in fact, created and controlled by the companies offering the products or services."
In an earlier statement, FTC Consumer Protection Bureau head Sam Levine, said the new rule "should help level the playing field for honest companies. We're using all available means to attack deceptive advertising in the digital age," he said.
Thanks to long-time Slashdot reader mspohr for sharing the article.
Account Cancelation (Score:3)
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unfounded or groundless legal threat, a physical threat, intimidation, or a public false accusation in response to a consumer review...
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The big factor is ecommerce sites canceling people's accounts when they write negative reviews.
You can find numerous examples of very fair negative reviews that got people's accounts canceled and home addresses banned. "Community Standards" is 100% subjective.
It's not worth leaving reviews anymore which is detrimental to the public good.
If FTC cared to ensure a fair review system that would be their top target.
Re: (Score:3)
Change of venue (Score:2)
> "anyone to use an unfounded or groundless legal threat, a physical threat, intimidation, or
> a public false accusation in response to a consumer review... to (1) prevent a review or any
> portion thereof from being written or created, or (2) cause a review or any portion thereof to
> be removed, whether or not that review or a portion thereof is replaced with other content."
So how long before doctors, lawyers, and professionals of any career path use this to go after anyone spreading even any so
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Sometimes fines like these have inflation adjustment built in; it was probably $50,000 when proposed.
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Funny how I have never heard of that type of account cancellations happening in Europe. A company doing this would probably get skewered here. And I have left plenty of (well-reasoned) negative reviews. Some vendors here even use these in advertising, because they have understood that a negative review does not reduce sales, it just means a different product gets sold and the customer has a higher satisfaction. So allowing well-reasoned negative reviews is actually good for business. I guess the ones doing
Re:Account Cancelation (Score:5, Interesting)
"The big factor is ecommerce sites canceling people's accounts when they write negative reviews." - or the ability to leave reviews removed. Many years ago I left a negative review on Amazon for a product I purchased (back when I still purchased from Amazon). I had left hundreds of reviews for products I purchased, very few of them negative. A few days after leaving the negative review Amazon sent me an email stating that I could no longer leave reviews because they found evidence that I was getting paid for my reviews violating their "community standards". I never once did this, ever. Furthermore, the email stated that this was a final decision and I could in no way appeal it. All of my previous reviews were removed, all 10 years worth. This really pissed me off and I largely backed off my Amazon purchases. When shit really started getting bad on Amazon about 6 years ago I left completely. It's nothing but an Asian flea market today full of crap and con artists.
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Anything sponsored is fake (Score:5, Insightful)
It's really simple, you don't need A.i. to fake a review.
How many youtube videos haven't we seen that opens with : ....
Manufacturer sent me this product for review, but I am in no way affiliated with
etc..
Every youtube - ever - today.
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It is not that simple. Anything sponsored needs higher standards in its reviewers. True, most people do not have that level of honor and integrity, but some do.
FTC is one of the good ones. (Score:5, Interesting)
Re: (Score:3, Interesting)
Hopefully it withstands the SCOTUS overturning of chevron deference.
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Hopefully, they will be able to continue that. Regulatory capture is the beginning of the end. Just look at Boeing or the crap going on on the software space.
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FTC is a nominated position so it's really up to us, or I guess, people in about 7 states.
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Looks like it. Well, if the voters decide to end it all, it will at least be a pretty fire.
Re:Couple of Problems Here (Score:5, Interesting)
Meanwhile, telling people what they can and cannot say, especially on their own web sites, is treading dangerously close to the textbook definition of "abridging the freedom of the press." The government has no authority whatsoever to restrain the written word except in clear cases of fraud.
Read what the FCC said. They are saying you, as a business, cannot remove a negative review, nor prevent one from being posted. In other words, that would be a violation of the person's 1st Amendment right to free speech and as many on here have pointed out, just because you don't like what someone has to say doesn't mean you get to censor it.
But that is exactly what you're saying. You are arguing that a business can violate someone else's 1st Amendment right to free speech, the very thing people whine about Twitter and other sites doing. So which is it? Either the business must leave up negative reviews or they don't.
As to everything else you said, who cares what the Constitution says? We have supposed Supreme Court justices who don't even acknowledge the 9th Amendment exists as well as ignoring the 1st's separation of Church and State. They just make up shit as they go along without any consideration for what the true meaning of the amendments are.
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The 1st amendment is a limitation on the government not business. The first amendment nothing to do with this. Unless your review is on a government hosted web site your review has no
Re: Couple of Problems Here (Score:2)
Which rulings?
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tl;dr
Go chevron!
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Writing fake positive reviews or removing negative ones in order to boost your product's rating seems as fraudulent to me as a company lying on an earnings report in order to boost its stock price.
When your revenue comes from "fake reviews" ... (Score:2)
... then maybe you are a perpetrator here and need to be stopped?
That said, I am sure the big assholes will find a way around this and will manage to stay dishonest.
Now prove it... (Score:2)
Punishment is all well and good if you can detect the problem happening. What tools to mere mortals have for that? And how many people can afford to litigate a company to punish them?
Even then it won't stop all cases, just make them less publicly obvious. Add one more layer between the publisher and purchaser.
Don't get me wrong... I prefer making it monetarily bad to do evil things, but I'm not all that excited by it. Heck they mention the courts are where the decisions will happen and too many well me