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New amazon guidelines
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Leo
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Oct 18, 2016 11:17AM

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However, I, and the rest of the mods will still be keeping a close eye on who reviews on amazon and who doesn't. The requirement to review on goodreads still stands.
However, if an author doesn't review on amazon, when it comes to sorting out subsequent rounds, the chances of a non-reviewer being accepted into another group are... slim.

Thanks

You can change the name you use to leave reviews on Amazon. I use the name 'Alara' for example. I can't recall why I chose that, but I did a few years back now and have not bothered to change it. The key point is that the name you leave reviews under is not linked with your real identity to anyone viewing it, so your anonymity is protected.

You can change the name you use to leave reviews on Amazon. I use the name 'Alara' for example. I can't recall why I chose that, bu..."
Thanks for answering. Could you help me understand some related things? First off, that changes the name on all my previous reviews, right? So if I was previously reviewing under my real name, and I changed my name to "Alaric" all my previous reviews would be written by Alaric, right? And if, in the future, I went back to reviewing under my real name, all my goodreads reviews would switch to my real name, right?
If so, this leaves holes in my identity protection, but if that's the best I can do . . . .

That is my understanding of it. Yes.

Thanks.


I don't know why the review was blocked in the first place, maybe amazon saw a connection between the reviewer and yourself.
Reviewers can still review books they received from sources other than amazon. The new guidelines only specify that a book cannot be supplied IN RETURN for a review. It must be the reviewers choice to review, with no expectation by the author supplying the book.



Is this very recent? I have not had a problem with this in the past, but I have not done such a thing since the changes in the terms and conditions.
S.A. wrote: "I had a reviewer that received a free copy of my book try to leave a review yesterday and amazon said it wasn't authorized …"
Could this be because of the new $50 (if I've got the amount right) spending requirement?
Could this be because of the new $50 (if I've got the amount right) spending requirement?

I have certainly done so since that time, on many occasions, so I am uncertain what the issue may have been. A'zon is very good at finding people they think 'know' you, perhaps that is what has been the issue for you. If not, I am very puzzled...


I have certainly done so since that time, on many occasions, so I am uncertain what..."
I had wondered about that - a possible Facebook connection or something similar? This group exists and you guys apparently haven't had a problem, so I'm considering it a fluke. Hopefully, there will be no more problems :-).

“Our community guidelines have always prohibited compensation for reviews, with an exception – reviewers could post a review in exchange for a free or discounted product as long as they disclosed that fact.
“Today, we updated the community guidelines to prohibit incentivized reviews unless they are facilitated through the Amazon Vine program."
The following paragraph occurs later in the policy update so it is entirely possible they didn't read this far.
“The above changes will apply to product categories other than books. We will continue to allow the age-old practice of providing advance review copies of books.”
Despite the anecdotal cases arising in contradiction and because I am in no position to determine the surrounding facts, I think the phrase, "other than books", attains. Especially since Amazon took deliberate pains to specify it and acknowledge a time-tested tradition.

I saw this post on Facebook the other day, and also noticed another member here had mentioned it in a different thread. Don't know whether it makes anything clearer or muddies the water even more!
http://annerallen.com/amazons-new-rev...

I saw this post on Facebook the other day, and also noticed another member here had mentioned it in a different thread.."
There is nothing new in that to what we have discussed here - thank goodness - but it is a reasonable review of the whole situation for someone unsure about it, IMO.

Hi, One ancillary point. I think something should be included about people who ask for and get a review copy and then leave the author hanging in the air. If they feel for whatever reason they don't want to review, no problem. But they should have the decency to tell the author why. Even a negative response can be construed positively. But silence is downright impolite.
David

In the review rounds, people who don't fulfil their obligations, don't get accepted for other groups.
People that miss out on reviews in a round get to put their book on the one for one list, and it is recommended that people that have placed reviews for the non-participant, remove their reviews so that person doesn't profit from the experience.
However, we clearly can't enforce such a suggestion.



Non-verified reviews still show up in the statistics, you just have to search for them a little harder, on .com anyway.
The default is set to display verified reviews first.

https://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/help/cust...

Faith, are you assuming the deletions were because you "hadn't bought the books", or did you get a message to that effect?
Did you try contacting Amazon for confirmation and/or clarification?
If you did contact Amazon, could describe their response and how it reconciles to their published policies (see Amazon Community Guidelines) which state:
Book authors and publishers may continue to provide free or discounted copies of their books to readers, as long as the author or publisher does not require a review in exchange or attempt to influence the review.
I point out that this guideline does not require disclosure of having received a free copy.
(The only other applicable book review qualifications I could find (see Amazon: About Promotional Content) provide the following example, which Amazon does not allow: An author posts a positive review about a peer's book in exchange for receiving a positive review from the peer. However, the same guidelines provide the following example, which Amazon does allow: An author answers a question about their own product and discloses their financial interest (e.g., "I'm the author of this book.") I'm assuming neither to apply to you?)
If you haven't contacted Amazon, would you consider doing so on our behalf? Or, if you prefer, I could contact them on my own behalf, as a Goodreads member (which I remind you is owned and operated by Amazon), unless the Review Group Administrator/Moderators have some sort of inside connection and a better chance of receiving a response.
Thanks,
bk


Emma: No connections whatsoever? So all my sucking up to you guys has been a waste of time? I think I'm going to be sick.



Not at all, you are just passing on useful information received from Amazon itself.
I was just being flippant.
And you have cleared up the issue that was puzzling us as to why your reviews were removed.

Thanks for the follow up, Faith. It's good to know you were censored because of Amazon's $50 minimum purchase policy, and not some arbitrary, hidden targeting policy (which would not be a first for Amazon.)
Regarding your 'more than 1 review in a day' (unofficial advice) comment, I have had a different experience. For Reading Rounds, I have been posting all four reviews at the same time, and I have never had a problem with culling. On the other hand, my reviews are verified purchases, so I'm wondering if non-verified purchases are treated differently. Does anyone have a definitive answer?

I would be pissed, too. But this is all temporary, right? Once you pay Amazon their $50 shake-down fee (I think Amazon terms it "minimum purchases") you can re-post the reviews and they will stick, right?

Humour would work!

{I feel quite irritated to discover that *all* of the reviews I have posted have been removed. This count was well over 100. I do reviewing professionally, and am always upfront about who I am reviewing for. Books reviewed via Netgalley, via Seattle, San Francisco, and Manhattan Book Reviews, books purchased *for my own enjoyment* and clearly labelled as such, everything has been removed for "possible affiliation".
I feel equally frustrated that I was not informed in any way of this decision and had to stumble upon it myself. For a professional reviewer, this is disgraceful. Not only that, but it's made a liar of me to tell publishers, publicists, authors themselves, or the various Book Review coordinators that these reviews are on Amazon, when they are not and I was never informed of the unwarranted removal.
I feel frustrated for being penalised as a professional reviewer. Publicists work with professional reviewers for just such reasons- garnering articulate and useful reviews. Yes, I do receive ARCs and e-galleys for review. No, I am not "paid" to provide vanity reviews. If your concern is a dearth of low star reviews, that is because it is my private policy not to do so. To shame an author, especially a fledgling one, serves no good purpose. In these cases, I make every possible effort to get constructive criticism to the author in question.
I request that all of my deleted reviews be restored immediately.
Thank you for your prompt attention in this matter.
~Dr J A d'Merricksson }

It should also be noted I spend a lot on Amazon each month for books...

I do feel your pain. It must be incredibly frustrating. However. authors can include your reviews in the editorial section of their book page. They can add it via their author central account on amazon.
If you are going to forward that message to amazon, I suggest you remove the 'professional' reviewer. It could indicate that you consider reviewing a job which in turn suggests your receive payment. I KNOW this is not the case, but the wording you've could be construed that way.
Please let us know what happens, we are all reviewers here.

I..."
I was posting here to get advice from fellow reviewers. The above is the email I sent Amazon. Despite the autoresponse saying to expect a response within 12-24 hrs, I have yet to hear anything. I'll be sure to post here once I do though!


I did also make the case that removing reviews posted by professional reviewers which tend to be more articulate, and leaving fluff reviews or simple one line 'it was great!' reviews hurts both authors and customers. If I am on the fence about a book and those are the only reviews, then I usually won't go for it.


When I was writing for several sites and magazines I got dozens of ARCS, PBs, and HCs every week. They weren't bribes because TOR knew I couldn't possibly read and review four of their books every week, but they will put in front of you as many as possible on the chance you will review one.
These days, I prefer e-copies, actually. (Save a tree.)
I write reviews for Amazon for books I have not purchased there quite often with never a problem. Maybe it is because I have been submitting reviews there so long.
Keebe
Http://www.Hikeeba.com/MEviews

Amazon are concerned about bias and providing legitimate reviews, so any mention of being paid, or 'sock puppet' accounts are frowned upon.
It also seems to be more of a case of 'guilty until proven innocent' if, they take a reviewers perspective into account at all.
But its their site and for ZON, the rights of the customer far outweigh those of the seller or reviewer.