(07-26-2017, 11:23 AM)John Clayton Wrote: (07-26-2017, 02:42 AM)dominicr Wrote: Is it unethical for attendees to post a review of our product(s) they got for FREE at a meetup?
No, not necessarily. But when a merchant (whom I will not name) does engage in such behavior along with false product information and price-gouging, and who was able to get negative reviews of his products removed, it is.
In fairness to all, however, the aforementioned merchant is the exception rather than the norm.
Let's look at a couple things, though:
First--"price gouging". I have a strong hatred of the use of this phrase in wet shaving. The reason is pretty simple--price gouging, as a marketing practice, typically involves necessities and goods required for survival being priced outrageously during times of specific shortage. Good examples of this are jacking the price of bottled water during a drought or contamination scare. Increasing the price drastically of curative medicines during a disease epidemic or outbreak. Driving the cost of food skywards during a famine.
These are prime examples of actual "price gouging", and it is unethical, immoral, and illegal.
Raising the price on a commodity or luxury item and placing it on the public market is not price gouging. It is retail. No matter how high those prices go, there is no requirement for those products to be purchased. There is a choice. This is not price gouging, it is a free market.
We can sit here and debate the semantics all day, but the bottom line is pretty simple: "price gouging" is specifically being used here to cast a negative and derogatory light on retail practices by merchants of luxury goods. The specific intent is to cast the high price of these products as exorbitant, unnecessary, and wrongful. These are luxury items. Their price is set explicitly by the willingness of the market to spend, NOT driven by the necessity of life. "Price gouging" here, is inaccurate and in poor taste, at best. At worst, it is an attempt to slander the character of retailers selling luxury items for luxury prices.
Advertising falsely, and using inaccurate product ingredients and labeling are all issues to be addressed with the FDA and Better Business Bureau. Those are the folks that control and enforce regulations designed to improve consumer confidence and marketing accuracy.
Reviews on a private website are privately owned. The owner of that website legally has a right to add or remove any piece of data they choose. Reviews fall under that category, and while some might find the practice distasteful, it is very common for major retailers with websites to eliminate negative reviews of products. It happens all over the place...