Picketing the Virtual Storefront: Content Moderation and Political Criticism of Businesses on Yelp

Authors

  • Ben Medeiros State University of New York at Plattsburgh, USA

Keywords:

platforms, content moderation, free speech, Yelp, commodity activism

Abstract

This article examines incidents in which business owners incur criticism on the consumer review platform Yelp based on political ideology. I analyze two case studies from the summer of 2018 by considering the sentiments expressed in the review texts, the application of Yelp’s relevant policies, and the tactical adaptations of reviewers. The case studies evince a normative conflict over how the platform should treat viral criticism of this sort. While Yelp clearly cannot truly function as a laissez-faire public forum, its moderation criteria can be gamed, and its efforts evidently exclude a range of sentiments that some users find meaningful. The article provides an in-depth exploration of a platform that has received somewhat less attention in the growing literature on the role of private intermediaries in shaping what kinds of speech attain visibility in the digital public sphere. 

Author Biography

Ben Medeiros, State University of New York at Plattsburgh, USA

Assistant Professor of Communication917 232 2561

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Published

2019-09-22

Issue

Section

Articles