Originally Posted by
BearX220
Then they ought to be more adept than the silly-sounding new reviewers who popped up to proclaim this random Embassy Suites in a random corner of Oklahoma "the best hotel in the world."
i would actually be very surprised if the big hotel chains had organized teams filing fraudulent reviews. The risk of discovery would far outweigh potential rewards.
And like any social-platform review resource (Yelp, Angie's List, Skytrax, etc.) TripAdvisor is at least 50 percent nonsense. There's some useful stuff but the unmoderated approach really hurts; so do lingering suspicions that the playing field is knocked askew by fake rave reviews, negative ones being yanked, or sponsor influence. Yelp, though, is even more suspect in this regard -- with floods of reports of merchants/restauranteurs/etc. seeing positive ratings disappear unless they buy Yelp advertising.
I am curious why you say that about Yelp. I have had pretty good experience with Yelp (at least for the areas that I move in). Also they have an automated bogus review screening algorithm. Not perfect but it tends to get the bot-like one review account reviews.