So after collecting opinions and info in this thread, it looks like reviews can be incriminating.
The information required for them to collate information wouldn't be *that* difficult to obtain given the powers of LE institutions.
There are people that say that not mentioning prices or services would make them okay, but that also makes reviews themselves rather limited in usefulness.
I agree that the LE would probably not spend time and effort collecting and collating the information, but really that's not the worrying part. Unlike jaywalking, reviews remain, and will remain even beyond the life of this board. As other members have pointed out, Google has indexed and will continue to index this board. Even with the recent decisions on privacy and the "right to be forgotten" in the EU, these policies are not enforced outside of it.
So if there was a lazy LE who wanted some serious press time with just paper pushing, collecting, collating, and then making a statement it wouldn't be so far to imagine.
I disagree with the bolded statement. I suppose it depends upon what you consider most important in a review. Based on my experiences before review boards existed (or I discovered them anyway), I have always considered that the most important questions a review answers are as follows - order of importance:
1. Is the advertiser a real SP or a police sting or a con artist?
2. If you patonize this SP or MP, are you likely to get robbed or knifed by the SP you are seeing or by an accomplice?
3. Even if you don't get robbed or knifed, are you likely to have your wallet rifled while you are otherwise occupied?
4. Alternatively, does this SP take the money and run (related to being a con artist)?
5. Now that we have gotten the physical safety questions out of the way, if this person makes an appointment, does she keep it?
6. Is she drunk or high or an obvious druggie looking for her next fix?
7. Personal hygiene? And if visiting an incall, general cleanliness of same?
Then, after all that:
8. Are any pictures real and is the physical description accurate?
9. Is she a clockwatcher or short-timer?
10. Does she deliver the services promised or is she an upseller?
11. Safe services? What are they?
12. How much?
13. What is she like as a person? Friendly, good conversation and relaxing time or mechanical, rushed and uninterested?
Numbers 11 to 13 are the ones where you get into "details of the encounter" - the part that would most likely be self-incriminating if anything was. And frankly, they are the least critical as far as I am concerned, because so much of it all is YMMV anyway. And the part of 13 that WOULDN'T be self-incriminating even in a review posted with your real name and address and a signature is again probably the most important bit of it: was she friendly and kind and appeared genuinely happy to be seeing you and talking to you (as well as "talking" to you) ... or did you get the impression that if you dropped dead in mid-session she would just want to roll you out the door so you weren't messing up her apartment anymore and otherwise wouldn't care?