UK's Trustpilot fined $4.6 million by Italian regulator for misleading consumers
FILE PHOTO: Trustpilot's logo is pictured on a smartphone in front of an electronic display showing the same logo in this illustration taken, December 4, 2021. REUTERS/Dado Ruvic/Illustration/File Photo
March 23 : Italy's competition regulator on Monday slapped a fine of 4 million euros ($4.6 million) on online review platform Trustpilot and its units for failing to adequately verify the authenticity of reviews and for misleading consumers about how their services work.
The platform's review collection services allowed businesses to handpick which consumers received review invitations, undermining the representativeness of published ratings even when reviews were labelled as "verified", the Italian Competition Authority said.
"We strongly disagree with the conclusions reached in this finding by the AGCM (regulator) and will be appealing it robustly," Trustpilot said in a statement.
The fine comes months after short seller Grizzly Research accused Trustpilot of creating fake profiles that gave negative reviews and then pressuring companies to pay for subscriptions - allegations which the company rejected.
The watchdog found that Trustpilot also used interface design techniques typical of "dark patterns" to obscure key information about its platform's functioning and which businesses paid for services, in breach of Italy's consumer code.
The company said it does not expect the fine to have any material impact on its operations or finances. Its shares, which fell as much as 2.7 per cent in early trading, were trading up 4.2 per cent as of 1416 GMT.
($1 = 0.8670 euros)