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Is that hotel review a fake? Review Skeptic will tell you

This free tool from researchers at Cornell University can spot fake hotel reviews to help you uncover honest opinions about your potential lodging.

Matt Elliott Senior Editor
Matt Elliott is a senior editor at CNET with a focus on laptops and streaming services. Matt has more than 20 years of experience testing and reviewing laptops. He has worked for CNET in New York and San Francisco and now lives in New Hampshire. When he's not writing about laptops, Matt likes to play and watch sports. He loves to play tennis and hates the number of streaming services he has to subscribe to in order to watch the various sports he wants to watch.
Expertise Laptops, desktops, all-in-one PCs, streaming devices, streaming platforms
Matt Elliott

The Internet is full of all manner of hyperbole and untruths, and none more so than with user reviews. Yet when shopping for a product or a service online, user reviews can be invaluable. How can you separate the wheat from the chaff? That is, honest reviews from the fakes?

If you are hunting for a hotel, then Review Skeptic can help. This free tool from researchers at Cornell University analyses the language of a review to identify fakes. The Cornell researchers fed their algorithm 400 fake reviews and 400 reviews they believed to be real from TripAdvisor of Chicago hotels, and it was able to identify a review as either the truth or a fake with 90-percent accuracy.

To use Review Skeptic, copy and paste a hotel review into the box and click the Test It button. The tool will show you which words it believes to be truthful and the others it believes to be deceptive and its verdict of the review as either Truthful or Deceptive.

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Screenshot by Matt Elliott/CNET

Review Skeptic is fun to play around with and may prove useful for my next vacation. In the meantime, I hope these smart people at Cornell are working on a similar project for Amazon reviews.

(Via Lifehacker)