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image I’ve just established an outpost on Amazon for promoting The Solomon Scandals.

The standard advice from book-marketing gurus, furthermore, is to review other writers’ titles on Amazon and along the way mention your own book in your signature line. I might do that.

But wait! Has Amazon started deleting reviews with such .sig lines, as a Canadian thriller writer reportedly says?

If so, this raises nasty questions about Amazon’s long-term trustworthiness in content-related areas—ranging from censorship to reliable long-term access to already-purchased e-books. Why, after all the hours of toil that authors have put in on the reviews, would Amazon be so dumb as to zap their work? Isn’t Amazon supposed to be an author’s friend? Given the incredible nature of the accusations against Amazon, I’m skeptical. An April Fools’ joke? Or actions by Amazon employees unfamiliar with official policy? You never know, though. Questions have arisen before about Amazon’s treatment of writer-created content.

Within Amazon’s participation guidelines, I see a ban against "use of the Service for commercial purposes such as advertising, promotion, or solicitation." But if, to identify yourself, you mention your own Amazon-sold book, are you really in violation of the guidelines? Why the supposed crackdown—after all these years of allowing identification? I’m writing an Amazon PR guy to check about the reports. Is this the same outfit that backed off from default text-to-speech for the Kindle II, because it didn’t want to upset content providers? I can’t think of a better way to enrage authors and savvy publishers than to zap the writers’  reviews posted in good faith. Moreover, Amazon will be depriving readers of relevant information in many cases.

Legitimate or not, here is a copy of the supposed accusations, about which I heard from a thoroughly reputable source:

I am bcc’ing this to ALL my author friends because I really want you to have this information before Amazon deletes all your reviews.

A week ago I found that all 85 of the reviews I’ve written for other books had been deleted. It has been a very difficult and stressful week dealing with Amazon. They are not very accessible and I was given at least 3 different reasons for why my reviews had been deleted. After numerous emails, this is what it’s come down to:

Their final ruling: "Please know that our participation guidelines don’t allow customers to promote their own titles in their reviews." If you sign your review with anything other than your name, your reviews could be deleted.

If any of you are in the habit of signing your reviews with something like "…, author of Whale Song", which has been common practice for years, Amazon has deemed this as "inappropriate" and will be deleting them. It seems they’re on a campaign to go through reviews posted. They recently made changes to the Amazon Connect program and all our blogs were temporarily gone too. Most are back up.

They also will delete your reviews if you have added the book link (that they supply) and directed it to your own book title’s Amazon page. Many authors have used that in their signature line. It can lead to deletion and suspension, according to Amazon’s latest email.

I argued the fact that thousands of authors sign their reviews like this, and that it’s common practice in our industry. I was told by my last publisher to sign my reviews like this; he even wanted us to include the ISBN, which I only did a couple of times then stopped. It made no difference to Amazon that this is what my publisher wanted me to do; they aren’t accepting signatures with titles.

Amazon is starting to take note of such practices and you’ll get no notice; they’ll just pull all the reviews you have written. That’s what they did with me, even though many of my older reviews were signed with just my name.

So to clarify, according to Amazon, when posting a review, you are not allowed to have a signature of anything more than your name, and NO links to or mention of your books whatsoever in the review or sig line.

I am giving you the heads-up now so you can go in and edit your reviews if you choose. That’s what I’d do, to be honest, because fighting with Amazon is not easy. There is no one who will talk to you by phone, and waiting for their response is not easy.

This rule also applies to any comments you leave on a book review. Amazon does not want authors to mention their own books anywhere on the review pages.

I haven’t heard from Amazon.ca yet, but I expect this will be funneled over to all the Amazons, so I’ll be working on editing my reviews there next week.

Please forward this on to all authors you know and any writing organizations or associations you belong to.

 
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