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Is it against the Facebook rules to.?

July 13th, 2010 by admin

facebook rules
??? asked:


Is it against the facebook rules and/or T&C to use someone else's photo, a fake name and chain add girls for the purpose of getting someone to meet up with them for sex? What I uncovered is complicated but I know the name and photo don't match and the age the person is giving does not match the name or pic. What's strange is that a (dodgy) friend of mine was the first friend of the mystery person, and is friends with like 80% of the mystery person's friends (all girls) + both my friend & mystery person both play the same 3 games and have the same bad spelling. the mystery person also has my phone number! I know my 'friend' has my number but not the guy in the picture and not a lot of other people (guy in the picture is friends with neither account) The mystery guy wants someone to meet up with them for sex, that's the general aim. Conversations get as 'rude' as you can imagine. So I'm thinking my 'friend' and the mystery guy are the same person on separate accounts - or something? does that make sense? I'm trying to add the person whose picture it is (I know of him, but he's not a friend as such) and ask/tell him what's going on. -- by "chain adding" I mean he adds a girl, then adds all her friends, then all the friends - friends and so on . . . How can I get to the bottom of this? or what can I do about it? if the mystery guy adds my 15yo female cousin I will go up the wall in a serious way and there will be no reasoning with me so please, help me now! haha! Thanks! xx WOOOW now! it's not me doing it!!! I'm the one getting pestered for sex by this mystery jerk! - who I think could be a friend. It's nothing to do with me, I just want to get to the bottom of it before someone falls for his crap and gets hurt!

cross

Category: Facebook |


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No Responses

  1. Sean Grant Says:

    Yes and it is also illegal. It is identity fraud. You can get charged and jailed.

  2. Kyle Says:

    yea it:( but love the idea

  3. ela Says:

    Yes. Facebook’s “Statement of Rights and Responsibilities” (a.k.a terms and conditions) stipulates in section 4.1: “You will not provide any false personal information on Facebook, or create an account for anyone other than yourself without permission.” Section 14 informs users that their accounts may be terminated for violating the “letter or spirit” of the Statement.

    However, there is no law (in the U.S.) that someone must post to the internet using their real identity, nor is there a precedent (yet) for doing so to legally constitute fraud in and of itself.

    You can report a fake profile to Facebook at:

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