The Union Government will soon develop a legal framework to keep checking on fake reviews on E-Commerce websites.
The Department of Consumer Affairs (DoCA) after studying the present mechanism being followed by the E-Commerce entities in India and best practices available globally, will develop these frameworks.
DoCA in association with the Advertising Standards Council of India (ASCI) along with various stakeholders like E-Commerce entities, Consumer Forums, Law Universities, Lawyers, FICCI, CII, Consumer Rights Activists, and others in a meeting discussed the magnitude and roadmap ahead for fake reviews on websites.
Since e-commerce involves a virtual shopping experience without any opportunity to physically view or examine the product, consumers heavily rely on reviews posted on e-commerce platforms to see the opinion and experiences of users who have already purchased the good or service.
However, the usefulness of online reviews is impeded by fake reviews that give an untruthful picture of product quality.
Thus, traceability by ensuring the authenticity of the reviewer and the associated liability of the platform are the two key issues.
Unfortunately, so far, automatic detection has only had partial success in this challenging task. Therefore, detection of fake reviews is needed.
Also, e-commerce players must disclose how they choose the “most relevant reviews” for display in a fair and transparent manner,” said Secretary DoCA, Shri Rohit Kumar Singh said.
All stakeholders agreed that the issue deserves to be monitored closely and an appropriate framework governing the fake reviews may be developed to address the issue for the protection of consumer interest.
Stakeholders from e-commerce companies claimed that they have frameworks in place by which they monitor fake reviews and would be pleased to take part in developing a legal framework on the issue.
Along with Secretary DoCA, Ms. Nidhi Khare, Additional Secretary, and Mr. Anupam Mishra, Joint Secretary attended the meeting.
Ms. Manisha Kapoor, the CEO of ASCI, highlighted the categories of fake and misleading reviews and their impact on consumer interest.
Paid reviews, unverifiable reviews, and the absence of disclosure in case of incentivized reviews which make it challenging for consumers to recognize genuine reviews were among the issues discussed.