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Yelp Says It Will Mark Pages of Businesses Accused of Racist Conduct (nytimes.com) 270

AmiMoJo writes: Yelp, the local search and review site, said it would post alerts on the pages of businesses where customers or employees have reported incidents of racism, the latest attempt by a U.S. company to introduce a tougher response system to confront discrimination after the police killing of George Floyd in May. The company, which offers a platform for users to rate places like restaurants, small businesses and popular tourist sites, said in a statement Thursday that it would use a "business accused of racist behavior" alert when there was "resounding evidence" that a business owner or employee had taken racist actions, including the use of racist slurs or symbols. This alert will always link to a news article from a "credible media outlet," Yelp said, without elaborating on which news organizations they considered to be credible or how it defined "resounding evidence." Yelp's announcement raised questions about how the company will enforce the initiative -- and how it will ensure that businesses were not falsely associated with racism or the target of defamatory reviews, which can significantly damage a business. Companies like Google and Facebook have also grappled with the difficult issues of moderating users on their online platforms.
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Yelp Says It Will Mark Pages of Businesses Accused of Racist Conduct

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  • by nevermindme ( 912672 ) on Friday October 09, 2020 @02:09PM (#60588892)
    We are sure yelp has never been misused or lied to by its reviewers. I see reviews that do not match format of the space, that a patio exists, that the establishment has a bar or lounge.

    We certainly want to make it more convenient to cast racism without proof.
    • by randal-the-vandal ( 6723512 ) on Friday October 09, 2020 @02:11PM (#60588904)
      No doubt that businesses could financially negotiate to have such a damning label removed from their listings on Yelp.
      • by ShanghaiBill ( 739463 ) on Friday October 09, 2020 @03:41PM (#60589348)

        A good business opportunity would be "Racism-as-a-Service" or RAAS.

        For a fee, you accuse competing companies of racism, get them blacklisted by Yelp, and thus drive more business to your client.

        • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

          by geekmux ( 1040042 )

          A good business opportunity would be "Racism-as-a-Service" or RAAS.

          For a fee, you accuse competing companies of racism, get them blacklisted by Yelp, and thus drive more business to your client.

          I have a better idea. DDoS the hell out of every business on Yelp with racist accusations. I mean obviously if Yelp has to go to these extremes that means racism is everywhere, so might as well make Yelp accurate.

          Also helps make a fucking point as to the stupidity of it all.

    • We certainly want to make it more convenient to cast racism without proof.

      I know that reading the summary is passé, so I cut this bit out for you.

      will always link to a news article from a "credible media outlet,"

      Even in the USA an article like that against a business is subject to libel proceedings if it's false. Seems like a reasonable idea to me.

      • Do local news blogs count? Do small newspapers that are no bigger than local blogs in terms of staffing for fact checking count? More bullshit idea laundering and sock puppetry.

        Either way, this can open Yelp up to liability for libel. They're just gambling that they can shake down little guys who have less in terms of legal resources.
        • Either way, this can open Yelp up to liability for libel.

          Depends on how they do it. If they are just using information from third party sources, which is what it sounds like, they're protected by 47 USC 230.

          • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

            They say they will always link to their source, so I guess the lawsuit would be aimed at the source rather than them.

            Of course journalists and news outlets are used to people accusing them of libel so if they publish it they are quite likely to have made sure they aren't going to lose. They are fairly well protected anyway in most democracies, such is the importance of having a free press.

            • The fact of the accusation can be confirmed and won't be subject to libel claims. The validity of the accusation is another matter.
              • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

                I was thinking the same thing. Usually when reputable news sources report stuff like this they don't take sides, they just report the facts and who is saying what. So if they really intend to require such a high standard of proof they will almost never meet it.

                I expect it's really just an extortion scam anyway.

        • by sjames ( 1099 )

          They've managed OK so far even with some reviews that reveal that the reviewer has never actually seen the place they trashed in the review.

      • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

        by rogoshen1 ( 2922505 )

        On one hand you don't expect people on slashdot to read the summary/article.
        But on the other you don't see a problem with yelp saying "these people are rayciss!" then expecting the consumer to go through the effort of reading an article from a 3rd party for a thorough and honest discussion on what transgression lead to the revocation of their social credit?

        in practice, the wokesters will see that 'evil, vile, racist' badge and move on to the next item on the list -- who has time to verify anything?

        Overall t

      • Libel won't protect you.

        If the flag just says that they've "received reports of racist conduct" that remains true even if the user reporting it is lying.

        • You don't have to intentionally lie.

          Libel also includes reckless disregard of the truth [findlaw.com].

          So, even if true, a report that they've "received reports of racist conduct" could be libelous if the reports are coming from an unreliable source and they make no attempt to verify them.

          • Section 230 of the Communications Decency Act would cover that. If they're making no attempt to verify/disprove them, they have a safe harbor. It is a section of the law that has been under attack this year, but has not yet been erased from law.

      • "credible" is whatever fits the posters agenda the best.
        Nobody links to anything that does not agree with his views. Anyone who worked on Wikipedia has daily.proof of that.

      • First, define "credible media source".
        Second, so yelp credibility now becomes no more than the least credible source on the above list.
        Third, what happened to innocent till proven guilty? We seem to be moving from "better 9 guilty people go free, than one innocent go to jail", to "better 99 innocents have their lives ruined than one guilty get away with something".

    • by e3m4n ( 947977 )

      or that it wont be used as an extortion racket the way bad food reviews were used to get discounts.

    • Due Process (Score:4, Insightful)

      by CRB9000 ( 647092 ) on Friday October 09, 2020 @02:27PM (#60588982)
      What is the process and criteria Yelp will use to adjudicate those accusations? What recourse will businesses have against it. I say Yelp is letting themselves into a whole lot of trouble and lawsuits galore.
      • Sue them for libel. Should be easy since they're dumb enough to put it in writing.

        • Re:Due Process (Score:5, Insightful)

          by rnws ( 554280 ) on Friday October 09, 2020 @05:05PM (#60589722)
          They and sites like TripAdvisor have been been sued multiple times in the past and prevail, e.g.
          https://www.nytimes.com/2018/0... [nytimes.com]

          they are all sheilded by Section 230 of the CDA:
          https://www.cnbc.com/2020/06/1... [cnbc.com]

          Having been a small business owner, I can tell you I wish there was a way to report abusive customers. the number of times my staff have ad to put up with all kinds of abuse, rants and tirades from the the public. Once we even had someone complain about something you couldn't even buy at our business!

          Yelp, TripAdvisor, et al, are nothing more than petty little shakedown outfits using clueless member of the public to be their unwitting online thugs, while entire shielded from any sort of accountability or recrimination by the law.
    • You clearly didn't read the part that says that it will require linking to a public news article from a credible media outlet.
    • We certainly want to make it more convenient to cast racism without proof.

      It's not like proof of racism means anything gets done about it anyway.

    • by sjames ( 1099 )

      That was my first thought. Just what we need. That and the problem that SOME accusations of racism are not actually racism at all, but no amount of rational explanation can ever get that particular stink off.

  • by Vermonter ( 2683811 ) on Friday October 09, 2020 @02:11PM (#60588912)

    ...of being racist. Yelp, please be sure to update your webpage to reflect this.

    Thank you

  • Yelp Says: (Score:5, Insightful)

    by bobstreo ( 1320787 ) on Friday October 09, 2020 @02:11PM (#60588916)

    "Nice business you have there. It would be a shame if you had any claims about racism against you.

    How much did you want to spend on your paid Yelp page again?"

    • Hurray for enabling Cancel Culture and making a buck at the same time. Very clever.
    • Alternatively, how long before shadowy "services" show up that will, for a fee, host or otherwise circulate fabricated articles accusing your competitors of racism? More or less, inverse SEO: bury your competition instead of elevating yourself.

  • by kaatochacha ( 651922 ) on Friday October 09, 2020 @02:13PM (#60588920)

    Nothing can go wrong with this.

  • Comment removed (Score:4, Insightful)

    by account_deleted ( 4530225 ) on Friday October 09, 2020 @02:14PM (#60588928)
    Comment removed based on user account deletion
  • by chispito ( 1870390 ) on Friday October 09, 2020 @02:25PM (#60588972)
    Here's a challenge: come up with a worse feature to implement in your product. I'm struggling to come up with anything.
    • Give a flag for "known kiddy fiddlers?" Or a flag for "known animal torturers?"

      I suppose though that's just on the same level.

    • They could merge with GrubHub.

    • They could start selling krokodil+heroin+dmt-filled babies if they were Kinder eggs, for rape, then eating, then a surprise inside.

      . . .

      You said worse.
      Don't challenge my imagination! I'm fueled by traumata you cannot imagine! :-P

      • Not in the US. You can buy them at import shops, sometimes, but you'll never aee them at a general supermarket, because the toys inside are considered a choking hazard.

        Sad, since I spent a large chunk of my childhood living in your very wonderful country and enjoying kinder eggs and fireworks, which are verboten where I now live.

  • Comment removed (Score:3, Informative)

    by account_deleted ( 4530225 ) on Friday October 09, 2020 @02:26PM (#60588974)
    Comment removed based on user account deletion
    • This is pure capitalism. Leftism would require the state to take some action.

    • by Moridineas ( 213502 ) on Friday October 09, 2020 @03:16PM (#60589200) Journal

      The most difficult part me to process is that while so many of these things might be well-intentioned (highlighting black-owned businesses, calling out racist businesses, every corporation in America sending me an email telling me they care about black lives, etc.), the end result is that EVERYBODY is hyper focused on race and our differences.

      The belief that all humans are equal and the same and that race should basically just be ignored (think Star Trek TOS) is just gone.

      If systemic racism is a problem today, will it still be a problem in 30 years when my children are adults? Will we still need to high black-owned businesses? When is it appropriate to "turn off" affirmative action and other race-based quotas or focus points? Will it ever be appropriate?

      I don't know have an answer to this, but I am less optimistic about the future than I have ever been in my life.

    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

      LOL you think Yelp is enacting "leftism", whatever the hell that is?

      It's just more leverage for that sweet protection money.

  • by randal-the-vandal ( 6723512 ) on Friday October 09, 2020 @02:28PM (#60588984)

    In Minnesota, the publication City Pages posted a piece on a local apple orchard [citypages.com]. They condemned the orchard of blatant racism because they referred to C19 as the "China virus" on Facebook and refused to apologize. That's all it takes to get the attention of a large local paper. For a while, this Facebook post managed to be more egregious and important than the actual problems that have been happening in Minneapolis lately, like the riots, crime waves, homeless people living in tents as winter approaches, and so on.

    That said, the post resulted in positive attention for the orchard. Many residents drove out of their way just to support the farm because they felt that the attacks were ridiculous and unjustified.

    I feel that the same sort of thing will happen with businesses on Yelp if they do this. Some users may actually be attracted to the "racist" businesses if they feel that the label is being misapplied and will go out of their ways to support them. I also wonder if this new label will result in physical altercations at these businesses which could result in lawsuits against Yelp.

    • Comment removed (Score:4, Interesting)

      by account_deleted ( 4530225 ) on Friday October 09, 2020 @02:44PM (#60589062)
      Comment removed based on user account deletion
      • Oh wow, that's random. I'm about 90% certain I've been there too--stopped on a trip to the North Shore (not a Minnesotan, so my extremely limited grasp of MN geography is more or less Twin Cities:, Duluth/North Shore, and some other stuff!).

      • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

        It's all just part of the culture war, and it's already evolving. I'm now seeing fake attacks on Twitter designed to get people to donate money, basically a "help I'm being mobbed" scam. Mostly just in it for the money I think but sometimes it's a trap, trying to build support for something before dropping the real bombshell about it so that all the people and orgs who piled in to help get covered when shit hits the fan.

    • "Troll" rating? Seriously?

      I hope that gets fixed by other mods and in metamod (is metamod still a thing?)

    • Yeah, calling it the "China Virus" is wrong. Free Chinese news sources call it the 'CCP Virus' so I'm respecting their naming.
      Xi reopened the wet markets and then allowed wild animal butchering in them.
      Xi/CCP ran the program studying bat corona viruses including 'gain of function' research. They then ordered all genetic sequencing and samples from the initial covid 19 outbreak destroyed and anyone warning about it arrested.
      I'm sure that's normal and completely above board... I mean, they warned everyone
  • wonder if this another extortion attempt by yelp. just like they allegedly do with bad reviews, too many businesses claim they got calls from yelp saying they will remove poor reviews for a price.

  • I don't know if it is only me, but this is not sounding right from the start. What will prevent a competing business from creating fictitious accounts or paying some unscrupulous people to accuse the competition with and have them carry the proverbial scarlet letter on their Yelp page ? How can this be right ? If google did this with their business reviews, whole world would jump and start calling unfair before you even heard about this. Why is Yelp not getting flack for this? Of course, in a day like today
  • by hackertourist ( 2202674 ) on Friday October 09, 2020 @02:42PM (#60589056)

    Scarlet letters and other forms of public shaming are long in the past, and good riddance too. Nice to see Yelp not learning from out collective past mistakes.

  • by magzteel ( 5013587 ) on Friday October 09, 2020 @02:48PM (#60589086)

    A local farm owner started getting all kinds of horrible reviews on yelp accusing him of all kinds of things.
    This is a friendly small business owner who has been in business for years, running this very small family farm in the middle of nowhere.

    What happened? He wore a "45" t-shirt to work one day. Someone decided to call him a racist on Facebook, and that set the outrage mob loose. Now yelp is filled with negative reviews from people in other states claiming they drove many hours to get to this tiny local farm and were treated horribly by the racist owner. People are just horrible bullies when they can get away with it.

    • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 ) on Friday October 09, 2020 @04:02PM (#60589486) Homepage Journal

      Link to the Yelp page? Google turns up nothing.

  • Extortion (Score:5, Insightful)

    by onyxruby ( 118189 ) <onyxrubyNO@SPAMcomcast.net> on Friday October 09, 2020 @02:51PM (#60589092)

    Yelp isn't healing racial division, they are creating it. No problem is going to be solved by Yelp doing this. In the real world this is simply going to become a route for people to extort small businesses. It isn't going to take long before someone sues Yelp as an accomplice to the extortion. RICO statutes could also be used as they will be profiting from the extortion. Lots of small businesses have already had problems with extortion over racism threats from mobs during riots. Here's a few examples:

    https://www.theblaze.com/black... [theblaze.com]
    https://thepostmillennial.com/... [thepostmillennial.com]
    https://thehill.com/blogs/blog... [thehill.com]
    https://www.lawenforcementtoda... [lawenforcementtoday.com]
    https://thepostmillennial.com/... [thepostmillennial.com]

    This kind of accusation can kill your business far faster than something like an accusation that order was late or mixed up. You can rest assured that this will lead to further violence as malicious people look to abuse this as another tool to extort small business owners and some of them stand up and fight back. Sooner or later people will die from one these violent encounters. Yelp needs to be responsible and permanently remove this before people start getting killed - immediately.

    • The Green Book dates back to 1936. You can act like Yelp is doing some horrible modern thing, but you're forgetting the other side of the coin. Black people don't always know where it's safe to go.

      I have no love for Yelp, but this at least has the potential for good. Especially since individual reviewers can't enable this flag on their own.

      • The Green Book was very different in form though. It listed businesses that were friendly to blacks. Typically they were either owned by blacks or whites that were sympathetic to blacks. Being in the Green Book was typically something that you wanted to have if you were okay with blacks, especially if you were in the south.

        This is threatening to paint a proverbial scarlett 'A', or should I say 'R' on a business for which there is no recourse. All it takes is a new article accusing a business of being racist

        • This is threatening to paint a proverbial scarlett 'A', or should I say 'R'

          These days, you could probably just go with (R)

          Look at the Breonna Taylor narrative for a prime example of a news story that completely fell part once a grand jury looked at the evidence instead of the media.

          The members of the grand jury are still in dispute with the state over information that has still been blocked from being released and manipulation of that jury by the state's attorney general. You can't look to either source for an informed answer.

  • Comment removed (Score:4, Interesting)

    by account_deleted ( 4530225 ) on Friday October 09, 2020 @02:53PM (#60589100)
    Comment removed based on user account deletion
    • by PeeAitchPee ( 712652 ) on Friday October 09, 2020 @03:01PM (#60589134)
      Except "bigotry" quickly becomes stuff like "Mr. SmallBiz Owner posted on Facebook that he doesn't agree with illegal immigration." I've already seen it happening, with progressives linking to such statements and calling for boycotts in an effort to get the business shut down. Don't think for a second that all of this stuff and more is on the table for Yelp if business owners refuse to pay their "protection money."
  • by rsilvergun ( 571051 ) on Friday October 09, 2020 @03:00PM (#60589128)
    It will be misused by everybody involved. I fully expect right wingers to report businesses to gin up fear of "Cancel Culture". And Karens to jump on the bandwagon too. And yes, there's a share of obnoxious lefties that'll do it.

    That said, anyone else remember The Green Book [wikipedia.org]? That was a real thing. My guess is somebody at Yelp thought it was a good idea to make a digital version of it.

    I can say this, a black buddy of mine was an over the road Truck driver and I remember him telling me that his driver manager didn't like sending him down south because he knew the cops would hassle him for 1 mile over the limit. So it always took longer for him to do the runs than the more, shall we say, "Fair Skinned" types. I'm in a pretty liberal place but again, I've heard stories of places you don't wanna go if you're not the right color, and that information is valuable.

    But Yelp, given their history of questionable business practices, is not the one to do it.
  • the day they can truly begin to implement the revolution.
    And seize their place in history as the purveyors of the scarlet letters
  • by Moridineas ( 213502 ) on Friday October 09, 2020 @03:10PM (#60589182) Journal

    A local bakery is owned by a Frenchman who is more than happy to talk to anyone about anything, for as long as the other person is willing. Apparently he made a comment about rioters/protestors/BLM to a person who was not amused (and I have no idea what his actual transgression was), but this annoyed customer made a Facebook post in one of the larger community groups and people wents NUTS.

    Within 24 hours this guy's Yelp reviews were gettin spammed with all kind of reviews from people that had obviously never set foot inside his shop. One star review because he had sign that said "This property protected by Smith and Wesson". One star review because as a black woman a different customer "felt uncomfortable" (no other reviews on this Yelp account). etc.

    I reported every review that was posted after the Facebook blowup and that truly seemed like they had never been there and Yelp removed each review. I was actually impressed that Yelp removed them.

    I guess now he would just get the Racist badge and oh well.

  • If I hate a business I just get onto yelp and check the rascist box instead of leaving a negative review. Yelp is really enabling!

  • by BAReFO0t ( 6240524 ) on Friday October 09, 2020 @03:27PM (#60589266)

    You know, so the mirroring is complete.

    Because apparently it is an unwritten iron law today, that if you see something despicable, you must strive to mirror it completely. Even if what you saw wasn't real in the first place but merely your prejudice. As long as you say you defend some victims, it is a-OK. (Even if those themselves disagree.)

    Bur hey, what do you expect from a society that says murder is alright if you first concivince yourself well enough that your victim is a murderer (too)? (Funny, given how many millennia we already teach that that is wrong )

  • If that is all it takes to tag someplace as chocked to the gills with racists, then eventually pretty much every place will be tagged.

  • I’ll only patronize business who, according to Yelp, have been accused of racism.

  • by argStyopa ( 232550 ) on Friday October 09, 2020 @05:23PM (#60589766) Journal

    ...like making them wear a star on their clothes, or something.

    Then they can't escape our judgement, anywhere.

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