National Post

When Facebook gets too personal

Accounts get locked down, ID demanded

- Cassandra Szklarski The Canadian Press

Thousands of Sarah Bell’s online friends knew her only by her roller- derby nickname, R’effin Adora Bell. Facebook simply knew her as a brazen offender of its realname policy.

Bell was locked out of her account for using a pseudonym — for security reasons, she says — and was shocked to learn how Facebook demanded she prove her identity. Facebook insisted she share digital copies of her passport and driver’s licence to get her account back. After a five- week battle to maintain her privacy, she reluctantl­y gave in.

“Eventually I had no choice,” she says with a sigh while detailing last year’s incident. “They shut down my primary mode of communicat­ion with people .... I couldn’t argue with them anymore.”

Bell’s experience is far from rare. Daily complaints on Facebook and Twitter suggest lockdowns in socalled “Facebook jail” have been a regular occurrence for years, and often for unclear reasons.

Technology lawyer David Fewer questions why the social media giant can’t verify users through other means. Just because it’s a condition of use doesn’t make it right, he says. “There are other kinds of mechanisms available to Facebook to get after identities,” says Fewer, director of the Ottawa- based Canadian Internet Policy & Public Interest Clinic. “Just because bad stuff happens that doesn’t mean that we all ought to be providing our identities and our identity documents just to use a service like this.”

Facebook’s r eal- name policy came under intense criticism in 2014 after the company disabled the accounts of several San Francisco drag queens. That prompted assurances it would give suspected violators notice before taking action, and more support in gaining verificati­on.

Toronto actor/ director Michael Mahonen says he received neither when he was forced to submit his driver’s licence to prove his identity, even though he didn’t use a pseudonym. He suspected another user complained about his posts discussing China’s treatment of Falun Gong practition­ers, leaving him scrambling to find out why Google could no longer find his Facebook page.

“It essentiall­y disappeare­d off the Internet altogether,” Mahonen says of last month’s incident. “It’s just too easy for anybody to do this to someone they don’t like.” When he asked Face- book why he was locked out, he says he was told he wasn’t allowed to know. Mahonen bristled at being asked for government identifica­tion, but says to Facebook’s credit, it was suggested he could black out some personal data including his licence number.

Facebook spokeswoma­n Meg Sinclair says account lockdowns usually happen when community standards are violated. She insists users are always notified when it happens. “One of our rules since the very beginning is that it’s always been a place where people have to be their real identity online, that’s what differenti­ates Facebook from most other platforms,” says Sinclair. “It’s one of our most important safety features. We’ve seen time and time again that people are much more respectful and more likely to follow rules and not bully or harass or use the Internet for poor purpose if they’re using their real names.”

Fewer notes that privacy l aws prevent companies from keeping personal informatio­n longer than it requires. And by and large, organizati­ons like Facebook generally don’t want to store such data since it increases their liabilitie­s, with Fewer likening them to “ticking time bombs” waiting for a security breach.

Bell says she initially tried to regain access to her account by sending other documents proving her identity, including a trading card, links to articles with her name, and links to website bios. That permitted her to re-enter her account, but she was locked out again when another administra­tor said she needed more proof.

“I can’t argue with them wanting to keep people safe, if that’s what it is, but I do feel like it’s odd that it’s so locked down,” says the 37- year- old, wondering why Facebook wouldn’t let her keep her real name private once it was verified. “You shouldn’t have to advertise it.”

In her case, she says using her real name actually limited her social circle. She had built up more than 2,000 f riends under her derby name, a moniker used at tournament­s and games where she worked as an official.

“Suddenly there’s this ‘ Sarah’ that is no longer being connected with anyone because nobody tags you, nobody invites you,” says Bell, who also hoped to keep her involvemen­t in the sport secret from her employer. “It totally halted my ability to communicat­e effectivel­y with people and it was (part of ) the slow decline of being as involved as I was.”

Mahonen says he was most upset by having to spend hours figuring out a way back into his account. “I had to go mine through levels within levels of sublevels to figure out all of this stuff,” says the 51-year-old, insisting Facebook definitely did not contact him. “I know they have more than a billion users in the world, but that also means massive revenues. Other businesses have help that involve humans.”

OTHER BUSINESSES HAVE HELP THAT INVOLVE HUMANS.

 ?? BRENDAN SMIALOWSKI / AFP / GETTY IMAGES ?? Toronto actor/director Michael Mahonen had to give Facebook his driver’s licence to prove his identity. He suspects someone complained about his posts on Falun Gong.
BRENDAN SMIALOWSKI / AFP / GETTY IMAGES Toronto actor/director Michael Mahonen had to give Facebook his driver’s licence to prove his identity. He suspects someone complained about his posts on Falun Gong.

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