Worse is:
Q: Will this steering wheel work for my car
A: I don’t have that car I don’t know
So, this at least has an answer… if you have it enabled on your account, Amazon will email you about products you’ve bought or sometimes even just looked at. It’s worded as the question someone else posed, so some 60 year old woman gets a “does this steering wheel cover fit my Ferd Fteenthirty?” In an email, and she writes back “I don’t know. I don’t own that truck.” And Amazon scoops the reply and posts it as an “answer”.
Yeah, I would really like to see them either stop doing that or make it very clear in their email that you should only respond if you know the answer to the question.
The email does say that, people do it anyway.
Ah, I’ll be honest, I don’t actually read these emails closely often, but you’re right. Looking now through my inbox archive, I see that Amazon added an “I don’t know the answer” link in their email sometime between April and May of 2019. It looks like initially they had the text somewhat smaller for the “I don’t know the answer” link, but they seem to have increased the text size to match the “Answer/Respond to this question” link sometime between February and March 2020. At any rate, those emails were going out for many years before 2019 without an “I don’t know…” link and I think they could still probably make it clearer to people what they’re actually doing by posting “I don’t know” as an answer.
I once bought a few bits via my 60 year old father’s Amazon and he’d forward these emails to me and then ask if I was helpful when we saw eachother in person.
It got better. The mails don’t look like personal mails anymore and the amount of “I don’t know” answers dropped.
That’s probably because the website sent an email to the person and asked them to answer the questions.
As nsfw posts go, this deserves 0/5 stars.
“The hotel was fine. Everything was perfect. But it was raining and cold. 3/5”
I love when someone asks a specific question about a product, and some boomer comes in with “I haven’t received it yet”.
Some of that blame is on Amazon as well, they send out emails to people that bought the thing being like “someone asked X about the product you ordered, do you know the answer?”.
“I ordered the wrong one, it didn’t fit.” 1/5
I bought a new fridge last week, one of the negative points mentioned in one of the reviews: “It’s smaller than my old fridge”.
This also works the other way round.
One star because the delivery was delayed.
Yeah and this annoys me so much more like how much brain cells do you need to understand that just because delivery was delayed does not mean the product itself is not worth buying.
The cardboard box was easy to open. 5 stars.
Why is this nsfw
You can see the bear. Do you want to have kids watch this?
It’s NSFW not NSFK.
I don’t know where you work but most places don’t allow bears on the premises.
This exchange has Ken M energy and I’m really enjoying it
Many companies reimburse the cost of the product in exchange for a 5 star review. Don’t trust all amazon reviews!
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“This game looks great! I’ve been waiting all year for this release and can’t wait to play it! 5/5”
“I love this movie! 5/5”
I can find reviews of the content all over… Maybe review the actual Blu-ray/DVD/CD/whatever. Good quality video/sound? Extra features? Movie was garbage but the DVD is excellent? That’s 5/5
I’m pretty sure ~80% of people can’t tell the difference between 1080i and 4k. They’d more likely complain about the color settings they set on their own TV than artifacting.
I’ll never trust a review on the internet.
Why not? Don’t you know it’s illegal to lie on the internet?
Op clearly has never read real reviews…m post man on time is only 3/5 stars… Fucking amateur.
Clearly its an important aspect of the product!