You never know who’s eating what

    by wetouchingbuttsornah

    6 Comments

    1. dorothy_zbornakk on

      if you want the most accurate representation of a product, look at the 2 and 3 star reviews. 1 star reviews are usually the lowest common denominator complaints about packaging, user error, shipping issues. 4 and 5 star reviews are usually blank ratings or posted in the first few hours. 2 and 3 star reviews are usually more considered and based on actual use cases.

    2. NobodyLikedThat1 on

      19 five-star reviews is almost always made by family, subordinates, and friends of whoever owns the business. You can still fake a high number with bots, but I think the algorithms are pretty decent at catching them.

    3. I’d add checking bad reviews to this. If no one is complaining about the food, just the customer service, then I know it’ll be a good meal.

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