Quote:
Originally Posted by GtrsRGr8
I think that Amazon "always" notes, in small, red print, when an ebook has "quality issues reported." The ebook's webpage doesn't have that notice. So, I'd be inclined to think that the "quality issues" have been corrected. That, and the early reviewers seem to be the ones to make note of that.
I don't know if, when the issues are corrected, Amazon sends buyers a corrected ebook, as they do when ebooks have free updates, et al.
Of much more concern to me is that there are an excessive number of "1" ratings, probably the reason that the overall rating of the ebook falls below 4.0 stars. I'd want to read the reviews to figure out the reason for the excessive number of "1's".
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I thought that some of you might be interested in reading this message from Amazon, if you haven't read it already, which popped up when I was scouring the ratings of a particular ebook a few minutes ago:
Amazon calculates a product’s star ratings based on a machine learned model instead of a raw data average. The model takes into account factors including the age of a rating, whether the ratings are from verified purchasers, and factors that establish reviewer trustworthiness.
I find that very interesting and insightful.