Hopefully the service can aggregate such ratings too, across all of its users.

    • @rotmulaaginskyrimOP
      link
      5
      edit-2
      6 days ago

      Partly for my own tracking in the future, and partly to see what other people think of those items/services too.

      • davel [he/him]
        link
        fedilink
        English
        66 days ago

        Other than your own blog? AFAIK not really. For most services, Yelp? For most products, Amazon?

        • @rotmulaaginskyrimOP
          link
          46 days ago

          true, although I can’t be anonymous i guess. And i can’t post about places that are closed, and I can’t post reviews about products that are no longer sold

  • davel [he/him]
    link
    fedilink
    English
    86 days ago

    It appears that the dead website that @[email protected] mentioned was not much more sophisticated than what @[email protected] suggested, “federated reviews”.
    https://web.archive.org/web/20220411192056/https://www.exitreviews.com/

    Nothing is stopping you from creating a Lemmy community for general product/service reviews, but I doubt it would work very well nor be very popular. But ActivityPub-based federated reviews sounds like an intriguing idea. I don’t know if/how ActivityPub can handle structured fields (https://web.archive.org/web/20220608160103/https://www.exitreviews.com/submission), and you’d probably want a search system that leverages those fields.

  • @[email protected]
    link
    fedilink
    English
    56 days ago

    There used to be a website called exitreviews.com but it redirects to looria.com now, which is an actual company and I can’t tell if there’s bias or not.

    It used to be intended for reviewing any product (usually upon failure).

  • @[email protected]
    link
    fedilink
    36 days ago

    Another one of the million projects in my backlog that I’ll never get to.

    There’s one major problem with this kind of website that I’ve been wanting a solution for, and it’s that people often only leave reviews when they have an exceptionally bad experience. So when you see a product with lots of negative reviews, does that mean it’s actually bad? Or is it just a very popular product, so lots of people will find issues with it? I think the solution to that is some form of review pre-registration. When you buy something that’s intended to last a while, inform the review website of that purchase. Then if something goes wrong and you leave a negative review, you can see what percentage of purchases are affected.

  • tuckerm
    link
    fedilink
    16 days ago

    I don’t know, unfortunately. This reminded me that I used to occasionally read product reviews on epinions.com, which was apparently was taken offline in 2018. It was basically what you’re describing. Another proprietary website bites the dust and loses all content. :(

    I heard about neodb.social recently, which is for entertainment media and is popular in China (although you can post in any language). Seems like we need something like that, but without specific product types in mind.