Victoria Soto's family set up their own Facebook page dedicated to their murdered daughter
Facebook has removed some pages dedicated to last year's Sandy Hook primary school shooting, following complaints.
Dozens
of "tributes" were added to the social network following the December
attack in Newtown, Connecticut, in which 20 children and six adults
died.
The family of one of the victims had raised concern some pages were being used to spread conspiracy theories.
Politicians had also complained that some posters appeared to be scammers.
Senator
Richard Blumenthal, Senator Chris Murphy and Congresswoman Elizabeth
Esty sent a letter to Facebook's chief executive, Mark Zuckerberg at the
end of last week calling for action, after a local newspaper publicised
the story.
A statement from Facebook said: "We have created a
new, streamlined, customised process with dedicated staff to allow
concerns specific to the Sandy Hook tragedy to be addressed directly and
immediately, while also recognising that people across the country want
to express grief for a terrible national tragedy."
Conspiracy theories
Greenwich
Time reported last week that the mother of Victoria Soto - a teacher
killed while trying to protect her students - had said she had
previously failed to convince Facebook to delete some of the pages.
She had said that her daughter would have hated some of the unauthorised pages set up in her name.
"I
understand some people have good intentions [and] some people say she
is a public figure, but, to me, she is my daughter that was put in this
awful position [and] she would never want to be a public figure and she
would not want people making pages in her name," Donna Soto was quoted
as saying.
The mother maintains her own Facebook page dedicated to the memory of her daughter.
Twenty six people were killed in the shooting at Sandy Hook school on 14 December 2012
Kaitlin
Roig, a teacher at the school, who survived the attack, also noted that
some posts had claimed the shootings had been staged, with one
conspiracy theorist suggesting Ms Roig bore a strong resemblance to a
known "crisis actress".
In the letter sent by the politicians to
Facebook, they noted more than 100 tribute pages had been set up in
Victoria Soto's name or likeness alone.
"Many give the appearance they were created by loved ones in the names of the victims," they wrote.
"Unfortunately, many of these pages have become vehicles for harassment, intimidation and possibly financial fraud.
"Pages
providing platforms for people to violate the privacy of families as
they grieve, or seek financial gain through soliciting donations under
false pretences, or generating Facebook 'likes' for marketing purposes,
should not be given quarter in the Facebook community."
The
politicians noted the site's own terms and conditions banned users from
setting up personal accounts in someone else's name and from posting
comments that "intimidate or harass".
'Vigilant' checks
A
search of the social network by the BBC revealed that dozens of
Community, Public Figure and Organisation pages dedicated to Ms Soto
still remain online.
However, Facebook confirmed it had "refined" its procedures to help it address complaints related to the shooting.
Several posts on remaining tributes request the creators take down their pages
"On
Sunday, Facebook briefed Connecticut Attorney General George Jepsen,
about our efforts to protect the families," a spokesman said.
"We
continue to work closely with his office, the families, and the
foundation representing the victims of Sandy Hook to ensure that we
respond as quickly as possible to concerns.
"For the past few
months, our rapid response team has acted swiftly to remove
inappropriate materials flagged by the foundation and the families. We
will continue to be vigilant."
According to Greenwich Time the news has been welcomed by Donna Soto.
This News form BBC
Rabu, 27 Februari 2013
Facebook Scrube Shooting ' Tributes '
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