A US bankruptcy lawyer with the same name as Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg is suing the social media platform, arguing his account keeps getting suspended for being falsely accused of “impersonating Mata owner with similar name”.
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A US bankruptcy lawyer with the same name as Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg is suing the social media platform, arguing his account keeps getting suspended for being falsely accused of “impersonating Mata owner with similar name”.
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WhatsApp has taken down 6.8 million accounts that were “linked to criminal scam” centres targeting people online around that world, its parent company Meta said.
The account deletions, which Meta said took place over the first six months of the year, arrive as part of wider company efforts to crack down on scams.
In a Tuesday announcement, Meta said it was also rolling new tools on WhatsApp to help people spot scams, including a new safety overview that the platform will show when someone who is not in a user’s contacts adds them to a group, as well as ongoing test alerts to pause before responding.
Scams are becoming all too common and increasingly sophisticated in today’s digital world. Too-good-to-be-true offers and unsolicited messages attempt to steal consumers’ information or money, with scams filling our phones, social media, and other corners of the internet each day.
Meta noted that “some of the most prolific” sources of scams are criminal scam centres, which often span from forced labour operated by organised crime – and warned that such efforts often target people on many platforms at once, in attempts to evade detection.
That means that a scam campaign may start with messages over text or a dating app, for example, and then move to social media and payment platforms, Meta said.
Meta, which also owns Facebook and Instagram, pointed to recent scam efforts that it said attempted to use its own apps – as well as TikTok, Telegram, and AI-generated messages made using ChatGPT – to offer payments for fake likes, to enlist people into a pyramid scheme, or to lure others into cryptocurrency investments.
Meta linked these scams to a criminal scam center in Cambodia and said it disrupted the campaign in partnership with ChatGPT maker OpenAI.
Meta has announced that it is abandoning its third-party fact-checking programs on Facebook, Instagram and Threads and replacing its army of paid moderators with a Community Notes model that mimics X’s much-criticised volunteer program, where commenting on the accuracy or otherwise of posts is left to users.
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Instagram and Threads accounts that share updates on movements of private jets owned by moguls and celebrities such as Mark Zuckerberg, Elon Musk, Bill Gates, Jeff Bezos, Kim Kardashian, Taylor Swift and Kylie Jenner have been suspended.
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Nigeria’s advertising regulator have brought a 30B naira legal case against Meta – owners of Facebook, Instagram, and WhatsApp – as well as their local affiliate based in Lagos.
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