02-11-2012, 00:47
(This post was last modified: 02-11-2012, 00:56 by mochaccino.)
The issue here is that another website, Rakuten, lists 707 reviews with an average of 3.9 out of 5 stars. A lot of the things I buy on a regular basis are bought online, since it's usually cheaper that way, and I have existing rules that I follow when deciding whether or not to take reviews seriously. Typically when I see an extremely high number of reviews for any product (over 500) I take that as a sign that a large of the reviews are genuine, so I don't know what to think in this case. Rakuten is similar to Amazon, and I know that when I shop on Amazon, products that have more than 10, but less than 100 reviews tend to be chock full of reviews that seem fake. That includes includes not only fake positive reviews paid for by the company that sells the product, but fake negative reviews by opposing companies. This is especially true of "iffy" products that tend to be sold by a number of companies that all use questionable marketing practices. Diet pills tend to be one such kind of product, and PM is another kind of product that definitely falls into that category IMO. On the other hand, I know that it's technically possible that a company would pay for hundreds of positive reviews on a single website, but in my experience it seems like most companies actually don't. Of course I have absolutely no way of proving that, even to myself, and I don't know for certain that Ladies Pueraria hasn't paid for an unusually huge number of reviews on Rakuten. I suppose it's possible, but I doubt it, rightly or wrongly.
About the review site link above, I can't tell if that review site is obviously genuine like Makeupalley.com or if it's one of those very iffy review sites that seems to exist just to post paid reviews. Some of those iffy sites do seem to allow real reviews into the mix, just to enhance credibility. Normally I would have no trouble telling which kind of review site I'm looking at, but all that google translate nonsense is making it too difficult to pick up on the small cues. If that site really is a Makeupalley type site, than I would take the reviews very seriously, but since I can't tell how trustworthy that site actually is, I automatically give more weight to the site that has more reviews, and in this case, Rakuten has more than 10 times as many reviews.
About the review site link above, I can't tell if that review site is obviously genuine like Makeupalley.com or if it's one of those very iffy review sites that seems to exist just to post paid reviews. Some of those iffy sites do seem to allow real reviews into the mix, just to enhance credibility. Normally I would have no trouble telling which kind of review site I'm looking at, but all that google translate nonsense is making it too difficult to pick up on the small cues. If that site really is a Makeupalley type site, than I would take the reviews very seriously, but since I can't tell how trustworthy that site actually is, I automatically give more weight to the site that has more reviews, and in this case, Rakuten has more than 10 times as many reviews.