San Francisco, CA
San Francisco restaurants threatened by scammers leaving negative online reviews
SAN FRANCISCO – A rising variety of San Francisco restaurant homeowners are saying they’re dropping enterprise to on-line scammers.
The restaurant homeowners stated they’re receiving emails from scammers threatening to submit adverse evaluations on-line except they obtain a payment, in response to the San Francisco Chronicle.
Some focused eating places embrace the NIghtbird, Sons and Daughters, and Third Cousin.
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The scammers threaten to offer them a single star, the bottom doable ranking. They don’t have any further feedback within the electronic mail.
[CORRECTION TO PREVIOUS STORY STATING YELP PLATFORM]
As the SF Chronicle and SF Eater reported, these bad actors are able to get away with this behavior because Google Reviews allows consumers to leave star ratings with no review text as opposed to Yelp reviews. A star rating without review text is less reliable and useful to consumers, which is why Yelp has always required ratings to be accompanied by actual reviews. In fact, in 2021 the average length of reviews contributed to Yelp was more than 500 characters.
Many stated it is a type of on-line extortion happening on Google Reviews.
Pissed off with how one can take care of the problem, the homeowners stated it is affecting their companies negatively.
San Francisco, CA
San Francisco celebrates Christmas, first night of Hanukkah
San Francisco, CA
St. Anthony's Foundation serves Christmas Day meals in San Francisco
San Francisco, CA
San Francisco hotel workers agree pay rise after 3-month strike
What’s New
Hilton hotel workers in San Francisco voted on Christmas Eve to approve a new union contract after a 93-day strike, according to the Unite Here Local 2 union.
The union, which represents about 15,000 workers in the region, announced that the deal settles the last of the city’s 2024 hotel strikes, covering approximately 900 Hilton workers.
Newsweek has contacted Unite Here Local 2 and Hilton via email for comment.
Why It Matters
The new contracts after this year’s strikes establish significant improvements in wages, health care and workload protections for workers at Hilton, Hyatt and Marriott-operated hotels.
The agreements conclude months of labor unrest that involved thousands of workers and disrupted San Francisco’s hotel industry.
What To Know
Hilton workers voted 99.4 percent in favor of the agreement on Christmas Eve, which includes a $3 per hour immediate wage increase, additional raises, and protections against understaffing and increased workloads.
The four-year contract preserves affordable union health insurance and provides pension increases. The deal covers workers at Hilton San Francisco Union Square and Parc 55, with 650 workers having actively participated in the strike.
This agreement follows similar contracts reached with Hyatt workers on Friday and Marriott workers last Thursday, covering a total of 2,500 workers who had been on strike since late September.
What People Are Saying
Bill Fung, a housekeeping attendant at Hilton San Francisco Union Square for 29 years, said: “These 93 days have not been easy, and I’m so proud that my coworkers and I never gave up. We stood together through the rain and cold, and even though there were some hard days, it was all worth it. We will go back to work with our health care, good raises, and the confidence of knowing that when we fight, we win.”
Lizzy Tapia, President of Unite Here Local 2, said: “Hilton, Hyatt, and Marriott workers refused to give up their health care or go backwards – and we proved on the picket line that we’re not afraid of a tough fight. As contract talks begin with the city’s other full-service hotels in the new year, they should know that this is the new standard they must accept for their own employees.”
San Francisco Mayor-elect Daniel Lurie said on X: “All those that have been out on strike will be back to work, and just in time for Christmas. So, things are looking bright as we head into 2025.
What Happens Next
Unite Here Local 2 said it would push for other full-service hotels in San Francisco to adopt the same standards established by the Hilton, Hyatt, and Marriott agreements when contract negotiations resume in 2025.
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