Little girls named after the Egyptian nature goddess Isis may well be struggling at the moment, tormented by people over their name.
That’s bad enough. But shutting down Facebook accounts of women named Isis?
That’s just straight up facepalm.
As she tweeted on Monday, Isis Anchalee, a San Francisco-based engineer, recently became yet another Isis to suffer from the media’s reliance on the term ISIS – an acronym for the terrorist organization Islamic State of Iraq and Syria.
@facebook why would you disable my personal account? MY REAL NAME IS ISIS ANCHALEE /facepalm
— Isis Anchalee (@isisAnchalee) November 16, 2015
Of course, Facebook’s real-name policy has meant that this has happened to plenty of other people: Native Americans, drag queens, Mr. Something Long and Complicated, and Ms. Jemmaroid von Laalaa, to name a few.
Anchalee said that she sent Facebook a copy of her passport to prove that her “real” name is really Isis, but that apparently wasn’t good enough:
Facebook thinks I’m a terrorist. Apparently sending them a screenshot of my passport is not good enough for them to reopen my account.
— Isis Anchalee (@isisAnchalee) November 17, 2015
The third try did the trick:
Third time sending in my information is the charm I guess. I’m back in :) pic.twitter.com/m0demGZitw
— Isis Anchalee (@isisAnchalee) November 17, 2015
Facebook then did the classy thing: researcher Omid Farivar publicly apologized, tweeting that he doesn’t know why it happened, but they’re on it:
@isisAnchalee Isis, sorry about this. I don’t know what happened. I’ve reported it to the right people and we’re working on fixing it.
— omid farivar (@bromid) November 17, 2015
Privacy watchdogs have been after Facebook for years on the real-name policy.
In July, a German privacy watchdog ordered Facebook to allow users to take out accounts under pseudonyms.
Then, in October, the Nameless Coalition, consisting of 75 human rights, digital rights, LGBTQ, and women’s rights advocates – including the Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF) and the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) – went on to pen an open letter to Facebook in which it explained why its “authentic name” policy was broken and how Facebook could mitigate the damages it causes.
Earlier this month, Facebook acknowledged the letter and said that change was in the works.
Alex Schultz, Facebook’s VP for growth and internationalization, said that a Facebook team is now working on reducing the number of people asked to verify their name on Facebook, when they’re already using the name people know them by, as well as making it easier for people to confirm their name if necessary.
Schultz says Facebook expects to test those changes in December.
In the meantime, those who are legitimately, “authentically” named Isis are still, obviously, liable to having their accounts reported and frozen.
Image of Facebook sign up screen courtesy of PeoGeo / Shutterstock.com
JR
The new format is AWFUL.
never mind
Congratulations, this is what we name “Security News”!
Wilderness
The new e-mail format is such that the pictures are so gigantic that they don’t fit on my phone or desktop e-mail client. I’m sure they’ll get it sorted out though, Sophos is a quality shop!
Paul Ducklin
On my iPhone, I use Apple Mail to read Outlook content, which often messes up images. In this case, however, it simply ditched the giant images altogether and the newsletter looked fine. Took me a while to realise what the fuss was about :-) But, yes…we’re on it.
peterjasontaylor@aim.com
After 9/11 a heavy lorry from the UK was delayed over 24 hours at the Swiss-Italian border because it said LADEN on the back.