English woman changes her name in order to log in to Facebook
A woman who used a pseudonym on Facebook so that she'd be more difficult to find has changed her name by deed poll to the fake name because she was blocked from accessing her account.
Jemmaroid von Laalaa, who was previously called Jemma Rogers, had been using the made-up name since 2008 so that she could avoid getting friend requests from people she didn't want to befriend on the social network. But that plan backfired when she lost access to her account, reports Mashable quoting The Independent.
Under the long-standing real-name policy, Facebook can suspend accounts reported as using a name other than the one listed on that user's birth certificate.
When asked to prove that the name she was using was her real name, von Laalaa, then Rogers, sent a photo of a faked bank card, after which Facebook suspended her account.
Keen to get access to the account, Rogers went a step further and decided to change her name by deed poll so that she could transfer official documents, such as her drivers' licence into her adopted Facebook pseudonym to regain control of the account.
Von Laalaa's account still hasn't been unlocked but she did get an automated message from the social network saying they are looking into it, according to ITV News.
"I can't believe I'm stuck with this stupid name and I still can't get into my Facebook," she said about the situation. "It's hard to speak to a human being as well, all I get is computerised messages back. It's so frustrating."
Facebook's terms of service says "users provide their real names and information, and we need your help to keep it that way."
Last month, a coalition of people called #MyNameIs, including members of the LGBT community, Native Americans and domestic violence survivors, protested outside Facebook's Menlo Park headquarters over its real-name policy.
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