...That when reviews are "real" that they can be a record of criminal activity?
...That if a site works to verify and prove that reviews are real, they can no longer claim "fantasy" "entertainment" and "user content", placing themselves in the realm of potentially being an enterprise that facilitates crime?
...That the mere fact that CL, BP, and most review board have not yet been taken down by governments, doesn't mean that there aren't well funded agencies constantly trying.
... That the truth is that reviews have been used in criminal prosecutions.
Investigations into can go for years and years, and if cases cannot be brought LE will work with lawmakers to write new laws to be able to use information that was previously not prosecutable, now valuable as the basis of prosecution. There are major societal forces pushing against this lifestyle all over the world. Things are not progressing and become more free, they are becoming more oppressive. This used to be somewhat underground. Get out there and use google and you will see what is going on.
This lifestyle isn't legal, this isn't YELP and you can't get a GROUPON. Sites are being monitored and infiltrated. Have you every considered that fake reviews are part of investigations where undercover credibility is being built?
All that aside, everyone knows that reviews are of limited value anyway. There are problem with consumer reviews as a phenomenon in general, being reliable. You simply can't trust what people write online. People are fucked up and say things that are untrue, filtered or exaggerated for all sorts of reasons.
And nothing turns men into whiny, lying, vindictive little bitches faster than not getting their way sexually. Hey it's true and it needed to be said. So I said it.
Here's some info from Science Daily about problem with reviews in general. Same principles apply here.
Immediacy of Language Influences Credibility of Online Consumer Reviews
Oct. 25, 2013 — Many companies are increasingly confused and upset about how to deal with negative online consumer reviews, says Zoey Chen of Georgia Tech Scheller College of Business. One way to overcome consumers' over-reliance on negative word of mouth would be to encourage satisfied customers to include language indicating that they wrote their reviews soon after product/service consumption, according to Chen's research.
In her study, recently published in the Journal of Marketing Research, she found that temporal cues as "this morning" or "I just got back from the best lunch" can boost the value of positive critiques.
"Prior research shows that positive online reviews are less valued than negative reviews," explains Chen, a fifth-year doctoral student in marketing at Georgia Tech Scheller College of Business, who-authored the study with Nicholas Lurie, an associate professor of marketing at the University of Connecticut.
Chen notes that positive reviews could be considered less informative than negative ones because the writers might be perceived as bragging about the good decisions they make in their lives.
"Their motivation for writing might be self-enhancement, signaling their expertise," she says. "But negative reviews are generally seen as reflecting more about the product or service than the lifestyle choices of the writer. Therefore, they tend to be seen as more credible.
"If people learn that you just went to an establishment and had a positive experience, they might think it's more about the experience than the individual," Chen says.
Chen and Lurie, who examined more than 65,000 restaurant reviews on Yelp and conducted lab reviews, conversely found that temporal cues don't have a significant effect on how a negative review is perceived