How to remove negative post from pissed consumer
If you are looking to completely remove posts from Pissed Consumer, this may not be easy. PissedConsumer will not remove any negative reviews unless they get a court order to do so. This means that first you need to figure out who posted the review, then sue them and if you actually win, you can request the court to order a removal. This could be a very costly method, specially if you do not know...
Read MoreRipOff Report Verified provides inusrance policy against negative feedback
RipOff Report is now offering for $89 per month a ongoing service of giving businesses 14 days to resolve complaints before a negative review is posted. Experts say that it may help boost rankings in Google and Bing. Ripoff Report creates millions of dollars every year by charging implicated companies a flat cost based upon the number of problems have actually been made against them. Business...
Read MoreHealth Inspectors May Use Yelp as a New Tool
Ever since L.A. County began to require public publishing of restaurant grades, the playing field has been incredibly leveled. A-rated restaurants as well as those with C’s had to bear all to public scrutiny, affecting business practices in the food industry greatly. Studies by Stanford and the University of Maryland calculated that customers rewarded eateries with 5% more revenue after the...
Read MoreLaw Against Revenge Porn is Advocated in Sacramento
If you’ve ever suffered from nude or sexually suggestive photos of you posted online from an ex, you know how mortifying and out of control the whole situation can feel. Posting pictures of former partners online anywhere from sexually suggestive to explicit is considered “revenge porn” in the law making system. Revenge Porn is highly damaging not only to an individual’s...
Read MoreYelp Addresses Ongoing Allegation of Extorting Small Businesses
Yelp is under attack again, and it’s the same old story. The social review site was recently featured in the Washington Post and The Los Angeles Times regarding a claim that it manipulates reviews and ratings to favor advertisers or punish non-advertisers. In an effort to clear Yelp’s reputation, Vince Sollitto, Yelp’s vice president of communications and public affairs, wrote in a company...
Read MoreWhat is CDA or Communications Decency Act, 47 U.S.C. § 230(c)?
Communications Decency Act, 47 U.S.C. § 230(c), is an internet legislation that went into law in 1996. It basically states that any owner of public online forum is immune from liability as long as the owner are hands off. It states: “No provider or user of an interactive computer service shall be treated as the publisher or speaker of any information...
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