Indie Book Club discussion
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Writing reviews on Amazon if you're an author
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If you have two amazon accounts, you can post from your personal account.
Thanks, Danielle, that makes sense. It's horrible that they could threaten to remove the book from the site! But obviously someone can't keep reposting a review once Amazon has removed it. I'll let people know about Amazon's rule if they're an author who wants to review for me, and I'll just have to accept they won't t be able to post the review on Amazon unless they have a personal account.
I don't have exactly the problem you all are talking about, but I noticed just recently that both my five-star reviews on Amazon are missing... and I know for a fact that the people who gave the reviews weren't authors. Granted, I know them, and their reviews were most likely a little biased, but since when it that Amazon's business, and how did Amazon know anyway that I knew them and that they weren't just some random people who really liked my book? Anybody know what's going on?

..."
I have been told that Amazon is checking IP addresses, and deleting reviews from people who have ever logged in from the same computer as the author, asserting that these people are either sock puppets or people who have a financial interest in the book or are acting on behalf of the author.
Ok, that makes a little more sense now. Still rather annoying, but thanks for clarifying...

IP checking makes sense.

Oh well I guess you have to have the same rules for everyone.
Eric wrote: "I use my personal account as my author account, and none of my reviews have been taken down.
IP checking makes sense."
But are these reviews for books in the same genre as yours, Eric? That's where I get stuck. Can an author review books on Amazon if it's not their genre? If not, that's extremely restrictive.
IP checking makes sense."
But are these reviews for books in the same genre as yours, Eric? That's where I get stuck. Can an author review books on Amazon if it's not their genre? If not, that's extremely restrictive.

Lol now I am confused :) Maybe it is just the IP address thing. You guys are right - that does make more sense, but I understand what Danielle's saying, too. I'm probably over thinking it - if I'm lucky enough to get a review and the person wants to post it on Amazon, great. If Amazon take it down, they take it down.

Amazon will also remove older reviews if they are not negative (though why they don't remove the negative reviews, I have no clue. An author I know was asking for reviews because all of her older positive reviews were being removed (or maybe Amazon considers it archiving?) and made her book look really bad.
And on the IP thing, how are they supposed to check IPs? Unless you are using the computer on the same session, the IPs will be different. Time Warner (you can insert pretty much any ISP here) resets your IP lease every 24 hours. This means that you may or may not have the same IP address from day to day. Also, I have five different devices at my house that access my wifi. They are all me. Does that mean I could switch devices and still be able to review? IP checking only works for static IP addresses, which are really only used in servers, that I know of. Dynamic IP addresses change and thus are not accurate at determining what computer was used. Generally, only a MAC address (the address assigned to your hardware) stays static and even that can change (wireless card dies so your replace it). I don't think that can be accessed beyond your own personal network. I was networking consultant for three years. I'm a little rusty but that should all be accurate (and don't you just hate when TWC treats you like an idiot when you have nearly as much technical expertise as their technicians).

Amazon tracks all of its customers. Seems like it wouldn't be beyond them to identify computers. Maybe its not an IP issue, but a tracking issue.

If you are in a network, all your devices are going to have the same IP I believe. The one having the IP is the router not the devices.
Regarding the IPs changing, it's true they change from day to day, but every Internet provider has a set number of IPs on a static basis and they assign those IPs to their customers. So even if you don't have the same IP from day to day, you are going to have one very close to the one you use the previous day. You will also have the same location and Internet provider and even if Amazon can't know for sure it's you they can make a guess about whether it's you or not. Probability say they might be right most of the times.
Obviously they can make a mistake, this not 100% reliable but the guess they make it's quite good.


Is this correct? I don't want to lose out on an Amazon review, even if it's negative, but I've read the below article and think that Amazon will just delete the review.
http://www.latimes.com/features/books...
The article said Amazon said to someone in an email:
"We do not allow reviews on behalf of a person or company with a financial interest in the product or a directly competing product. This includes authors, artists, publishers, manufacturers, or third-party merchants selling the product. As a result, we've removed your reviews for this title."
Amazon's review guidelines state a similar thing, without directly saying "authors."
What about you guys that are authors? Do you post reviews for books on Amazon, if they are in the same genre that you write? Have any of the reviews been pulled? I'd love your thoughts.
Thanks, Mona