Amazon is suing more than 11,000 people who they say runFacebook groups that broker fake product reviews.- The lawsuit says that
Facebook group members would get paid cash or in free products to write 5-star reviews.
Amazon is broadening its crackdown of so-called "fraudsters" who pay for positive product reviews.
The e-commerce giant filed a lawsuit targeting more than 11,000 people who it says help run Facebook groups brokering fake reviews on Amazon's site.
According to the complaint, Facebook group administrators offer Amazon sellers 5-star product reviews from group members in exchange for payment or complimentary products.
Amazon's lawsuit details negotiations between Facebook group administrators and Amazon sellers looking to purchase
Another administrator asked an Amazon seller to pay a $6 fee before being granted access to post in the Facebook group, the suit alleges.
Amazon's lawsuit says that sellers would post in these groups, asking group members to purchase their products and review them on Amazon's website with a promise of getting refunded after a positive review is posted.
One group, called "Amazon Product Review," had more than 43,000 members until Facebook removed it for violating its rules against Fraud and Deception, according to the lawsuit.
Amazon says participants in these Facebook groups muddle certain words to avoid getting suspended for violating Facebook's policies. Amazon pointed to some participants typing "R**fund Aftr R**view," instead of the phrase "Refund after review," and one group called "Amazon R3vi3w3rs Group (USA ONLY)" as examples of the practice.
Amazon says that, since 2020, it has reported more than 10,000 fake review groups to Facebook, and the company has removed more than half and continues investigating others.
In a statement to Insider, a
However, in the past, Amazon has implied that Facebook-owner Meta could do more to target these groups. Last year, Amazon published a blog post criticizing social media companies for not spending enough money to root out groups incentivizing people to write fake product reviews.
Amazon says it is suing to shut down these groups, identify bad actors, and get repayment of their "ill-gotten gains."
This is not the first time in recent history that Amazon has used the courts to stop the proliferation of fake product reviews on its e-commerce site. In February, the company sued two websites it accused of being "fake review brokers."