Y
yolo23
Iron
- Joined
- Sep 15, 2023
- Posts
- 51
- Reputation
- 46
Surgeons who aren’t that great at their work but rely heavily on marketing to appear excellent often attract negative reviews. And yet, many of these reviews don't just stay up, they get "shadowed", especially on Google reviews.
By “shadowed” I mean this: The person who wrote the review can still see it when logged into their own account, but no one else can. From the outside, it's as if the review never existed. Google doesn't notify you when this happens, no warning or explanation. Unless you randomly check from another account or device, you'd never even know it disappeared. And if you don't edit or repost it, it typically won't come back.
This isn't some rare occurrence either. Surgeons frequently use reputation management companies to deal with negative feedback. These firms can mass-flag reviews and get them quietly suppressed, even when those reviews are factual, truthful, and written in good faith.
And it doesn't stop at Google. Forums, Reddit, and Facebook groups around cosmetic procedures are often heavily influenced or outright infiltrated by marketing teams. Vulnerable people looking for solutions are exposed to highly curated success stories, while negative outcomes get buried, dismissed, or removed.
On top of that, surgeon websites only showcase their best results, the top fraction of outcomes. You're not seeing the full picture, just the highlight reel.
The uncomfortable truth is: You can't fully trust what you see online anymore. If a surgeon has an almost perfectly clean reputation with little to no criticism, that should raise questions, not reassure you.
In the age of AI and aggressive online reputation control, it's easier than ever to shape perception and suppress dissent. Take everything with skepticism. Cross-check sources, look for patterns, and don’t rely on any single platform or community.
The "blackpill" here is simple, what you're seeing is often curated, and the negative experiences are the easiest to make invisible. Be careful and do thorough due diligence before making any irreversible decisions.
By “shadowed” I mean this: The person who wrote the review can still see it when logged into their own account, but no one else can. From the outside, it's as if the review never existed. Google doesn't notify you when this happens, no warning or explanation. Unless you randomly check from another account or device, you'd never even know it disappeared. And if you don't edit or repost it, it typically won't come back.
This isn't some rare occurrence either. Surgeons frequently use reputation management companies to deal with negative feedback. These firms can mass-flag reviews and get them quietly suppressed, even when those reviews are factual, truthful, and written in good faith.
And it doesn't stop at Google. Forums, Reddit, and Facebook groups around cosmetic procedures are often heavily influenced or outright infiltrated by marketing teams. Vulnerable people looking for solutions are exposed to highly curated success stories, while negative outcomes get buried, dismissed, or removed.
On top of that, surgeon websites only showcase their best results, the top fraction of outcomes. You're not seeing the full picture, just the highlight reel.
The uncomfortable truth is: You can't fully trust what you see online anymore. If a surgeon has an almost perfectly clean reputation with little to no criticism, that should raise questions, not reassure you.
In the age of AI and aggressive online reputation control, it's easier than ever to shape perception and suppress dissent. Take everything with skepticism. Cross-check sources, look for patterns, and don’t rely on any single platform or community.
The "blackpill" here is simple, what you're seeing is often curated, and the negative experiences are the easiest to make invisible. Be careful and do thorough due diligence before making any irreversible decisions.