
'There is a problem': Meta users complain of account shutouts
'More than just an app'
The online petition about this issue was started by Brittany Watson, a 32-year-old from Ontario, in Canada.She decided to act after her Facebook account was disabled for nine days in May before it was reinstated. She claims her page was cancelled over "account integrity", and Meta has not provided her with any answers as to why."Facebook wasn't just an app for me," she told BBC News. "It was where I kept years of memories, connected with family and friends, followed pages that brought me joy, and found support communities for mental health."
When her account was banned, Brittany said she felt "ashamed, embarrassed and anxiety-stricken"."The weight of feeling exiled from everyone takes a pretty strong hold on you," she added.She quickly discovered she wasn't the only one affected - thousands have signed the petition she started."There is a problem - it is personal accounts, it is business accounts, Facebook pages and Groups. I can't believe they [Meta] are only saying it is just Groups."Meta has told BBC News that it takes action on accounts that violate our policies, and "people can appeal if they think we've made a mistake".It has also outlined in detail how it moderates accounts using a combination of people and technology to find and remove accounts that broke its rules.It says it is not aware of a spike in erroneous account suspension.
'There is no customer service'
Another user who recently lost access to his Facebook account is John Dale, a former journalist who runs a local news group in West London with over 5,000 members. His account was first suspended on 30 May for breaking community standards, and the page he administers has briefly come back twice since then.He has no idea why.As he was the only administrator of the group, he currently cannot approve new posts. Additionally, his own posts have been removed from the group."It's frozen in time, [while] quite a lot of material has been deleted," he told BBC News.Mr Dale is appealing his suspension, but if he loses his appeal his account will be permanently deleted. He says he has received limited information on why he was banned."There is no customer service," he said.
'My income has taken a huge hit'
Michelle DeMalo, who is also from Canada, says she has suffered financially since her Facebook and Instagram accounts were suspended in the middle of June. They were reinstated on Wednesday, a day after the BBC contacted Meta about her case.She runs several pages, with some associated with her businesses in digital marketing, and also uses Facebook Marketplace to buy and sell goods.All her accounts are linked, so when her personal Instagram page was suspended for "violating the terms" of a Meta policy, it triggered all of her pages to be suspended."My income's taken a huge hit in the past couple of weeks," she told BBC News from her home in Niagara Falls."People think I blocked them or think something happened to me."Michelle can't think of anything which triggered the suspension, and was worried about the reputational hit as some of her clients can no longer contact her.She struggled to find a Meta employee to take up her case with."There's no customer service. There's no human being you can talk to."
AI suspicions
Another person left frustrated at Meta's moderation policies and its appeal process is Sam Tall, a 21-year-old from Bournemouth.He told BBC News that he discovered his Instagram page was suspended last week for breaching "community standards".He decided to appeal, and it was rejected two minutes later - making Sam suspect the process was entirely handled by AI."There is absolutely no way that was seen by a human," he told BBC News."All the memories, all my friends who I can no longer talk to because I don't have them on any other platform - gone".As his Facebook account was linked, that was removed too."No explanation. I'm a bit baffled, to be honest."Sam says it is time for some serious action from Meta - and not just for his sake."If I know it is quite a few people, then there is a chance of Meta waking up and realising 'oh, this actually is an issue - let's reinstate them all.'"
Sign up for our Tech Decoded newsletter to follow the world's top tech stories and trends. Outside the UK? Sign up here.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Reuters
20 minutes ago
- Reuters
Hedge funds shift bets to double down on Big Tech amid AI boom
NEW YORK, Aug 14 (Reuters) - Wall Street's largest hedge funds, Bridgewater Associates, Tiger Global Management and Discovery Capital, increased their exposure to Big Tech in the second quarter amid a generational boom in the growth of artificial intelligence. During the June quarter, hedge funds cut their exposure to laggards in industries like aerospace and defense, and consumer and retail, as part of a broader move back to momentum investing. It marks a big shift from earlier this year when bets on Big Tech had soured for top money managers due to tariff-fueled volatility in financial markets, with investor concerns around rising inflation and fears of a bubble in AI triggering a sell-off in "Magnificent Seven" stocks. Since then, tech stocks have staged a big comeback. The S&P 500 (.SPX), opens new tab is up 10% so far this year, buoyed largely by the largest tech companies, which account for nearly a third of the combined market cap of companies on the index. Outside technology, some hedge funds, such as Lone Pine and Discovery, also bet on UnitedHealth Group (UNH.N), opens new tab. Berkshire Hathaway (BRKa.N), opens new tab and Michael Burry's Scion Asset Management also unveiled bets on the insurer, while Soros Fund Management boosted an existing position. Shares in UnitedHealth are down 46% this year, as the company faces rising costs, a U.S. Department of Justice probe, a cyberattack and the shooting of former top executive Brian Thompson last December. The fund's positions were revealed in quarterly securities filings known as 13Fs. While backward-looking, these filings typically reveal what funds owned on the last day of the quarter and are one of the few ways hedge funds and other institutional investors have to declare their positions. Below are the details of the changes in the holdings of the top hedge funds: Bridgewater Associates added more shares in Nvidia (NVDA.O), opens new tab, Alphabet (GOOGL.O), opens new tab and Microsoft (MSFT.O), opens new tab in the second quarter. The macro hedge fund founded by Ray Dalio more than doubled its bets in Nvidia. It ended June with 7.23 million shares in the chipmaker, or 154.5% more than it had at the end of March. Nvidia was Bridgewater's biggest bet in a single stock, totaling $1.14 billion. Its holdings in Alphabet and Microsoft went up by 84.1% and 111.9%, respectively, amounting to $987 million and $853 million. Other AI-related stocks added were Broadcom (AVGO.O), opens new tab (+102.7%), to 317.8 million shares, or $317 million, and Palo Alto Networks (PANW.O), opens new tab (+117%), to 313.8 million, or $314 million. Discovery Capital, whose founder Rob Citrone has recently been bullish on Mexico's America Movil ( opens new tab due to its exposure to Latin America, doubled its stake in the wireless provider during the second quarter. For the quarter ended June 30, the fund amassed another 2.65 million shares, valuing its current holding in America Movil at about $95 million. Citrone's hedge fund, which generated a 52% windfall on its investments last year, has increased its exposure to Latin America as part of a strategy to diversify from U.S. holdings. During the quarter, Discovery increased its holdings in Big Tech, as it more than doubled its stake in Meta Platforms (META.O), opens new tab, the parent company of Facebook, while also betting on booming demand for AI as it took a new position in Nvidia-backed cloud provider CoreWeave (CRWV.O), opens new tab. The hedge fund also increased its position in UnitedHealth by 13%. Tiger Global Management bought more stocks in some Magnificent Seven companies in the second quarter, including (AMZN.O), opens new tab, Alphabet, Nvidia, Microsoft and Meta, its 13Fs showed. Chase Coleman's hedge fund added roughly 4 million shares of Amazon and ended June with roughly 10 million shares, worth $2.34 billion. The fund also increased its bets in smaller AI-players. It added over 800,000 shares in chip-making equipment supplier Lam Research Corp (LRCX.O), opens new tab, ending June with 5.26 million shares, valued at $512 million. Many changes in Philippe Laffont's Coatue Management portfolio were also around AI-related stocks. It unveiled new positions in both Arm Holdings and Oracle (ORCL.N), opens new tab, adding stakes worth roughly $750 million and $843 million, respectively. Both companies have boosted AI-related business initiatives. Coatue also increased its holdings in Nvidia-backed CoreWeave, adding 3.39 million shares in the second quarter, with its stake in the company worth $2.9 billion. Lone Pine Capital took a new position in UnitedHealth Group, buying up 1.69 million shares worth about $528 million during the June quarter.


Reuters
2 hours ago
- Reuters
AI startup Cohere valued at $6.8 billion in latest fundraising, hires Meta exec
Aug 14 (Reuters) - Canadian AI startup Cohere was valued at $6.8 billion following its latest $500 million funding round, as it seeks to expand its market share in a highly competitive industry of selling AI to enterprises. The funding round was led by Radical Ventures and Inovia Capital, with participation from existing investors AMD Ventures, Nvidia (NVDA.O), opens new tab, PSP Investments and Salesforce Ventures, among others. Unlike most AI companies such as OpenAI and Meta's (META.O), opens new tab Llama, which are focused on broad foundational models, Cohere builds enterprise-specific AI models. "The funding allows us to expand more globally, branch off into different modalities, as you saw us launch a command vision model recently, and keep building secure AI for the enterprise," Nick Frosst, co-founder of Cohere, said in an interview. Alongside the fundraise, Cohere appointed Joelle Pineau, former vice president of AI Research at Meta (META.O), opens new tab , as chief AI officer, and Francois Chadwick, former executive at Uber and Shield AI, as chief financial officer. Pineau, who was with Meta for eight years and had led Meta's Fundamental AI Research group since 2023, left in May, at a time when the tech giant is aggressively investing and building out a new AI research team. In January, Cohere launched North, a ChatGPT-style tool designed to help knowledge workers with tasks such as document summarization. The company said it will use the new funding to advance agentic AI that can help businesses and governments operate more efficiently. The fundraise comes amid a broader surge in AI financing, as private equity and Big Tech channel capital into startups in pursuit of strong returns from innovative AI products.


Reuters
3 hours ago
- Reuters
Lyft co-founders to step down from ride-hailing firm's board
Aug 14 (Reuters) - Lyft (LYFT.O), opens new tab said on Thursday its co-founders Logan Green and John Zimmer are stepping down from the ride-hailing services provider's board, following the completion of a two-year transition plan. Green and Zimmer began serving as the chair and vice chair of Lyft's board in 2023 after stepping down as CEO and president, respectively, handing the reins to David Risher, who has been a board member since 2021. The duo founded Lyft in 2012, with the company now operating across four continents and nearly 1,000 cities. Sean Aggarwal, who was the chair of Lyft's board from 2019 to 2023, will reprise his role. Zimmer is launching a new consumer-focused business venture named YES&, while Green will continue as a venture partner at Autotech Ventures, a firm investing in the mobility and transportation sector. Lyft, which recently completed its nearly $200 million acquisition of European mobility platform FreeNow, has signed a deal with China's Baidu ( opens new tab to introduce the search-engine giant's robotaxis in the region. It posted revenue of $1.59 billion in the second quarter, missing estimates of $1.61 billion, according to data compiled by LSEG. Rides on Lyft's platform grew 14% to a record high of 234.8 million in the quarter, slightly below estimates of 235.9 million, per Visible Alpha.