In electronic marketplaces populated by self-interested agents, buyer agents would benefit by modeling the reputation of seller agents, in order to make effective decisions about which agents to trust. One method for representing reputation is to ask other agents in the system (called advisor agents) to provide ratings of the seller agents. The problem of unfair ratings exists in almost every reputation system, including both unfairly high and unfairly low ratings. We begin by surveying some existing approaches to this problem, characterizing their capabilities and categorizing them in terms of two main dimensions: public-private and global-local. The impact of reputation system architectures on approach selection is also discussed. Based on the study, we propose a novel personalized approach for effectively handling unfair ratings in an enhanced centralized reputation system. Experimental results demonstrate that the approach effectively adjusts the trustworthiness of advisor age...