The Yelp review site just got more notorious this week. The widely used website that allows users to write reviews in order to help people find great local businesses is under fire again. The New York Times reports that Yelp is involved in a class action lawsuit filed by two law firms on behalf of a veterinary hospital in Long Beach, California. The Yelp lawsuit details issues that have been plaguing the company recently.
The lawsuit was filed last Tuesday in federal court in Los Angeles. Some of the claims against Yelp include: unfair business practices, running an “extortion scheme,” and having Yelp employees call businesses in order to have them pay Yelp monthly in order to remove or adjust negative reviews about their business.
According to Tech Crunch, the Yelp lawsuit was filed as Cats and Dogs Animal Hospital Inc. v. Yelp Inc. The New York Times reports that while Yelp has not commented on the actual lawsuit, Vince Sollitto, Yelp’s vice president of communications said this in a written statement: “The allegations are demonstrably false, since many businesses that advertise on Yelp have both negative and positive reviews. These businesses realize that both kinds of feedback provide authenticity and value. Running a good business is hard; filing a lawsuit is easy. While we haven’t seen the suit in question, we will dispute it aggressively.”
For more information, please visit our Related Resources.
Related Resources:
- The Yelp Question: Are Free Online Reviews Good? (FindLaw’s Free Enterprise)
- Yelp Reviews to Get Responses from Businesses; Defamation and Online Reviews (FindLaw’s Free Enterprise)
- Review Sites Under Fire: Useful Consumer Tools or a Plague of Unfairness to Businesses and Professionals? (FindLaw’s Common Law)
- Business Litigation Overview (provided by Feldman, Fox & Morgado, P.A.)
You Don’t Have To Solve This on Your Own – Get a Lawyer’s Help
Civil Rights
Block on Trump’s Asylum Ban Upheld by Supreme Court
Criminal
Judges Can Release Secret Grand Jury Records
Politicians Can’t Block Voters on Facebook, Court Rules