Two weeks ago, Facebook was forced to address a firestorm over its real-name policy after "several hundred" drag queens and performers were targeted in a spree of user reports. On that day, Facebook responded by sending a message to those account holders: either switch their public Facebook names to "legal" names or convert their accounts to public "pages," which lack certain normal-profile features. The affected users had two weeks to do so, which ran out today.Fabulous!
However, instead of disabling those hundreds of accounts, Facebook went in a decidedly different direction. A meeting between affected performers, including original complainant Sister Roma, and company officials took place at the Facebook campus today, and according to a Valleywag report, it ended with Facebook issuing an official apology and promising "substantive changes" to the real-name policy.
"Facebook agreed that the real names policy is flawed and has unintentionally hurt members of our community," San Francisco Supervisor David Campos said to Valleywag. "Facebook apologized to the community and has committed to removing any language requiring that you use your legal name. They're working on technical solutions to make sure that nobody has their name changed unless they want it to be changed and to help better differentiate between fake profiles and authentic ones."
02 October 2014
Hurray! Facebook Blinks!
Facebook has apologized to cross dressing LGBT members who want to use their stage name, and looks to be allowing "Drag Queen" names in the near future:
Labels:
Business
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Civil Rights
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Internet
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LGBTQ
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