Federal Court orders Amazon to turn over review, ratings docs to Competition Bureau
Amazon will also have to release reports about product refunds and returns not passed on to third-party sellers, information about the costs of managing and moderating product reviews and records related to disciplinary action taken against third-party sellers, like warnings, removal of product listings, and instances where they were downgraded in search results.
Rounding out the documents ordered to change hands are records related to 124 users who have posted reviews on its platform.
When asked on Wednesday about the order, Amazon spokesperson Kristin Gable said in an email, “We continue collaborating with the bureau to share more about Amazon’s long-standing commitment to fighting fake or improperly incentivized reviews, both in Canada and globally."
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Bureau spokesperson Marianne Blondin, meanwhile, said in an email that the organization's goal is to "determine if Amazon’s marketing practices raise concerns under the deceptive marketing provisions of the Competition Act."
When the bureau solicited information from the public about the Amazon investigation in 2020, it asked for information about past or present Amazon policies "which may impact third-party sellers’ willingness to offer their products for sale at a lower price on other retail channels, such as their own websites or other online marketplaces."
The bureau also wanted info on the ability of third-party sellers to succeed on Amazon’s marketplace without advertising on Amazon and efforts by the tech company that "may influence consumers to purchase products it offers for sale over those offered by competing sellers."