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An Indiana lawyer named Mark Zuckerberg is suing Meta, saying his Facebook pages keep getting disabled because he was ‘impersonating a celebrity’
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An Indiana lawyer named Mark Zuckerberg is suing Meta, saying his Facebook pages keep getting disabled because he was ‘impersonating a celebrity’

Claire Dubois 15 views
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An Indiana lawyer named Mark Zuckerberg is suing Meta, saying his Facebook pages keep getting disabled because he was ‘impersonating a celebrity’

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It’s Mark Zuckerberg v. Mark Zuckerberg. An Indiana bankruptcy lawyer who shares a name with the Meta cofounder and CEO is going after the social media giant for allegedly disabling Facebook accounts because he was “impersonating” the tech billionaire of the same name.

Lawyer Mark S. Zuckerberg sued Meta this week, claiming the company breached its contract

“Each time Plaintiff’s Facebook account is disabled, Meta accuses Plaintiff of ‘impersonating a celebrity’ and not using an ‘authentic name,’” the complaint said.

Zuckerberg told Fortune that Meta sometimes took between four and six months to reinstate his account, while keeping the $11,000 he spent on advertising. Every time it was disabled, Meta required him to scan images of his driver’s license and

“All my competitors are using the platform to try and get clients, and I paid [Meta] money to try and get clients, and then they shut me off again,” he said. “It’s just not fair, and it’s not right.” 

Meta makes the majority of its revenue—which totalled $164.50 billion in 2024—from advertising. However, the tech company has come under scrutiny for its practice of making advertising revenue from accounts it removes from its sites.

From July 2018 and April 2022, Meta made more than $30 million in advertising revenue from public relations or advertising networks that the company later removed for participating in “coordinated inauthentic behavior” like spreading misinformation or taking on false identities, Wired reported in 2022. A Meta spokesperson confirmed to the outlet it does not give back ad payments if a network is removed from the platform.

According to Zuckerberg’s lawsuit, “Meta has a duty to exercise reasonable care to ensure Plaintiff is able to obtain the full benefit for advertising services for which it paid.”

Meta did not respond to Fortune’s request for comment but told Axios “We have reinstated Mark Zuckerberg’s account, after finding it had been disabled in error.”

Zuckerberg has long had a history of being mistaken for the Meta boss. In 2020, the state of Washington sued him believing he was the Meta CEO, alleging he endangered an adult in need of protective services.

The bankruptcy lawyer’s personal website says his homonymous relationship with the Meta CEO has had other repercussions on his life, including the need to turn off his phone each night due to the number of notifications he receives from people believing him to be the tech billionaire. According to the website, Zuckerberg receives more than 100 friend requests from Facebook users and receives packages and letters with suggestions on how to “improve Facebook,” phone calls from people wanting tech support, as well as death threats and harassment.

“I don’t wish Mark E. Zuckerberg any ill will at all,” the website says. “I hope the best for him, but let me tell you this: I will rule the search for ‘Mark Zuckerberg bankruptcy’.”

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Claire

Claire Dubois

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