Facebook users suspected of using fake names are being kicked off the site, reports The Sydney Morning Herald. The paper cites Elmo Keep – yes, it’s her real name – who was banned without warning from Facebook, until she sent in official proof of her identity. It says numerous others have been banned by Facebook’s name police, for using names ‘including “podcast”, “beaver”, “jelly”, “beer” and “duck”‘.
Facebook’s terms of use make a vague statement prohibiting “creat[ing] a false identity”. Their code of conduct goes a little further, telling members they may not “register for more than one account or use or attempt to use another’s account, service or system without authorization or create a false identity on the Service or the Site”.
The Sydney Morning Herald explains this as Facebook “making the web more credible” by preventing people from hiding behind pseudonyms and false identities. I prefer Valleywag’s interpretation, that this is Facebook’s guarantee to their advertisers that targetted ads are being aimed at the right demographics. You don’t want to pay to advertise to 20 year old women on Facebook, only to discover that half of them are actually 50 year old men in disguise.
Many eBay sellers and etailers I know have Facebook IDs that match their business names. From a branding point of view, this looks like a great idea: if you’re going to use Facebook to promote your online business, better to do it under your business name, right? But if you’re doing that, you’re risking having your Facebook account terminated.
5 Responses
I’ve known people (or known people who knew people) with the names Cherry, Pinapple, Apple, and Sunny. I wonder if their accounts are ok.
I’m pretty sure Facebook has a way for businesses to register their identities on their site.
A company is a legal entity so surely a incorporation certificate from Super Max Limited would be enough to ID me (theoretical only I hate social networking sites)
Facebook’s take on businesses is at https://www.new.facebook.com/home.php#/business/?pages
The difference is setting up a page rather than a profile.
Like Tamebay on Facebook 🙂
Andy, absolutely – but what you can do with a page is incredibly limited compared with what you can do with an ID. A page has to sit there and behave itself, where as an ID can be all over Facebook if it likes – much easier to get your business name out there if it’s your ID.
i am not a meber f facebook but someone has made me one n its a fake and the are causing me alot of problems they have put picures of me and messed aut with my girlfrends head the username they have put me under is michael connellythey have spelt my last name wrong this account needs erasing.