FTC Slams PR Firm For Phony Reviews

gregoryg

Mad Scientist
Jul 13, 2010
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FTC Slams PR Firm For Phony Reviews

PR firm Reverb Communications has reached a settlement in an FTC case alleging that it left false reviews for a number of iPhone games.

Consumers like to be informed before making purchases - they tend to price shop and read reviews before spending their money. Naturally, The Federal Trade Commission wants to protect these potential customers from being misled by any false endorsements left by advertisers that fail to disclose their role in marketing the product. Yesterday, the FTC announced that it had reached a settlement in one such case, brought against the gaming-focused PR firm Reverb Communications for leaving a number of online reviews while posing as uninvolved customers.

The FTC complaint alleges that, between November 2008 and May 2009, Reverb posted a number of game reviews on the iTunes App Store under false names, chosen to give the impression that the reviews were from disinterested consumers rather than a public relations agency. By not making it clear that it was promoting the game, the PR firm may have tricked potential customers into purchasing games that they might not have otherwise picked up.

The FTC revised their Internet endorsement rules last year, requiring advertisers and bloggers to fully disclose all ties to a product before providing any sort of endorsement or review. These charges are the first to be brought up under these new guidelines.

Reverb admits no guilt in the matter, and maintains that it settled the case out of a desire to move on. In a statement released today, Reverb stated, "Rather than continuing to spend time and money arguing, and laying off employees to fight what we believed was a frivolous matter, we settled this case and ended the discussion."

The firm added that the reviews in question were left by seven of their sixteen employees. who purchased the games with their own money, on their own iTunes accounts.

Under the terms of the settlement, Reverb Communications is required to remove all of the existing false reviews and are forbidden from making any future endorsements unless it clearly identifiesits relationship with the product.

Consumers that feel they have been personally affected by these false reviews can leave comments on the settlement at the FTC's public registry [https://ftcpublic.commentworks.com/ftc/reverb/]. These comments will be collected until the 24th of September, at which point the FTC will decide whether or not to accept the settlement.

Sources: Gamasutra [http://www.nytimes.com/2010/08/27/technology/27ftc.html?_r=3]

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Crunchy English

Victim of a Savage Neck-bearding
Aug 20, 2008
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Wow, now THAT's an organization I can get behind: one that slams PR Plants. You hear stories about those "mills" where people post hundreds of times a day under dozens of carefully crafted personas. I wonder how effective these new rules will be at shutting down those operations?
 

Jared

The British Paladin
Jul 14, 2009
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OH wow o.o Now thats an unusual one...Now, if only it could do more abour real life bias
 

ionveau

New member
Nov 22, 2009
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Yup all the reviewers that gave Starcraft2 more then 6/10 should be brought to justice
 

Arachon

New member
Jun 23, 2008
1,521
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gregoryg said:
FTC Slams PR Firm For Phony Reviews
You just had to, didn't you? [http://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/Main/IncrediblyLamePun].

Also, is that Cro Mag Rally?
 

Therumancer

Citation Needed
Nov 28, 2007
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ionveau said:
Yup all the reviewers that gave Starcraft2 more then 6/10 should be brought to justice
Unrelated to this paticular game, I think this is going to be an issue with a lot of reviewers and such especially after the entire Gerstmann thing. How are review based sites and such going to reconcile this with the advertising dollars they accept and so on?

It would be nice if this causes more impartial, and less top heavy reviews of video games.

I also wonder to some extent if this would make "Game Informer" effectively a criminal enterprise, because it's one of the most heavily criticized review sources out there when it comes to their impartiality.
 

FieryTrainwreck

New member
Apr 16, 2010
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I shouldn't be surprised that a PR firm knows exactly how to frame this lawsuit ("It's forcing us to fire people... people with families... families with kids... kids who might have cancer..."), but I still want to punch the quoted individual in the face with a brick.

Innocent people are fired without good reason every fucking day. I'm not going to feel bad for shitheads who are justifiably fired for screwing with consumers.
 

subject_87

New member
Jul 2, 2010
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Sweet! Also, could the FTC perhaps break up all the other Astroturf groups that are thinly veiled outlets for corporate interests?