Man Gets 3 Years In Jail For Fake Facebook Profile

from the fraud-or-fun? dept

Earlier this month, we pointed to the case of a Moroccan computer engineer who was arrested, supposedly for “stealing” the Moroccan prince’s profile on Facebook. As we noted in the post, the original details weren’t clear on whether the guy had somehow gained control over the prince’s actual Facebook page (which seemed unlikely) or if he’d just set up a fake profile. Further details revealed, indeed, that the guy had merely set up a fake profile of the prince for fun. Given how common fake profiles of celebrities are on Facebook, it seems rather ridiculous to consider that being akin to identity fraud. Apparently, however, the judicial system in Morocco feels differently. The guy in question has now been sentenced to three years in jail. This seems ridiculously excessive, especially since it doesn’t sound like the fake profile was negative in anyway. The guy, Fouad Mourtada, claims to be a fan of the prince who just saw the opportunity to have a bit of fun in setting up a profile for him. It’s difficult to see how any court with any sense of reason could consider that to be the equivalent of identity fraud.

Filed Under: , ,
Companies: facebook

Rate this comment as insightful
Rate this comment as funny
You have rated this comment as insightful
You have rated this comment as funny
Flag this comment as abusive/trolling/spam
You have flagged this comment
The first word has already been claimed
The last word has already been claimed
Insightful Lightbulb icon Funny Laughing icon Abusive/trolling/spam Flag icon Insightful badge Lightbulb icon Funny badge Laughing icon Comments icon

Comments on “Man Gets 3 Years In Jail For Fake Facebook Profile”

Subscribe: RSS Leave a comment
44 Comments
Ima Fish (profile) says:

Re: What if

“Would going after the person who put up such a profile seem “ridiculous” to Mike too?”

You should at least attempt to be analogous. Your example was clearly libelous. However, the example cited above clearly was not. Accordingly, it would only make sense that Mike would have a different view of two contrary situations.

comboman says:

Re: Re: What if

You should at least attempt to be analogous. Your example was clearly libelous. However, the example cited above clearly was not.

I followed all the links and none of the articles state what was actually in the facebook profile other than the statement by the convicted man that it was done “for fun” (lots of room for interpretation there). As much as I hate to defend dorpus, he may actually have a point. Even if his “fun” wasn’t libelous (by American standards), making fun of the leader of an conservative Islamic monarchy is probably not a wise move.

known coward says:

Identity fraud is identity fraud.

Posing as someone else is fraud simple enough, whether it be attempting a bank withdrawal or making a facebook profile.

This case is in morocco not here, if it is illegal there the Moroccan gov’t are perfectly within their rights to do whatever the hell they want with the guy.

Even if it were here, I think posing as another living human being should be should be illegal and 3 years, before probation and time off for good behavior, in the slammer is a fairly reasonable amount of time for it.

Remember this is not someone making up a profile to be anonymous, or claiming to be anonymous (which would fall under protected speech). It is someone creating a profile of a “celebrity” and claiming it as their own.

James says:

Re: Identity fraud is identity fraud.

It seems like you are probably one with strict punishments. However, the guy is a fuckin prince, people idolize famous/respectable people all the time. pretending to be them online, especially in a place like facebook, is not anything like hacking into the prince’s bank account and making a “bank withdrawal”. Just because Morocco and other Islamic countries are “like that” does not mean its right.

people like u are the reason why the Islamic world wastes half their time delivering harsh punishment to women because they dont conceal their entire body with burkas, why people are beaten for having no beards, while not focusing on real life problems, like improving the economy, and the education systems.

Remember, Its not 1 month, not 6 months, not even 1 year, but 3 damn years, for having a fake facebook account.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Good for Morroco

No it wasn’t. No one was gonna believe that was really the Prince of Morocco. If you saw that facebook page and thought it was real than the internet isn’t a good place for you anyway. He wasn’t trying to gain anything by doing.. just having some fun.

If I’m bob and you’re dan and I walk around all day with a sign that says ‘I’m dan be my friend’… is that really fraud? Even if it was.. a punishable case that does more good than bad?

The infamous Joe says:

Clearly the world has gone mad.

FTA:

According to the website, he told family members who visited him in jail that he had been blindfolded and beaten unconscious at the time of his arrest.

Seriously? You guys think this is a *good* response to a fake _FACEBOOK_ profile? Three years in jail??! It wasn’t even “Hi, I’m the prince and I like touching small to medium sized mammals.” it was just in fun! Do you think there aren’t Dubya Bush facebooks out there.. do you really think our great president made it? Should *those* people get 3 years too? What if it was Dubya’s relative instead?! (As is the case here.)

Tell me, what if he ordered a pizza to his house and said he was the prince? 3 years? What if he dresses up for the prince on halloween? 3 years?!

Pull your heads out of your butts. It’s freakin’ facebook. Relax. This is absurd, no matter where you live.

Curtis Wright says:

Jailtime!

It doesn’t matter if we like it or not, or that we think it’s bad that this happens to someone. I say that because any person in another country should know the laws of his/her country.
Ok, point taken. No one individual can know all the laws. My point is that you should know that if you live in Morroco, you need to know that you’re not bringing condemnation down upon yourself. Didn’t this individual know anything about his own country?

JohnG says:

fake Facebook celebrities

I agree with you it’s ridiculous they arrested the guy. But not for the same reasons you gave. If the idea was to send a message so others don’t create a fake celebrity profile it isn’t working. There are still many fakes which it seems Facebook isn’t doing anything about. That’s the ridiculous part. People posing as celebs are not helping real celebrities(yes some, though few, are on there) and not helping fans of the particular celebrity either. However if the arrest would have prevented others from lying they are a celebrity then the arrest would not be ridiculous. Keep in mind using someone else’s identity is a criminal offense as it should be. If someone’s a fan they can create a Fan Page for/about that celebrity and they don’t have to lie to the public they are that person. As far as I’m concerned Facebook has because of this become a big joke and a laughing stock. Or as one group on Facebook says, due to this it’s now known as Fakebook.

JohnG says:

fake Facebook celebrities

I agree with you it’s ridiculous they arrested the guy. But not for the same reasons you gave. If the idea was to send a message so others don’t create a fake celebrity profile it isn’t working. There are still many fakes which it seems Facebook isn’t doing anything about. That’s the ridiculous part. People posing as celebs are not helping real celebrities(yes some, though few, are on there) and not helping fans of the particular celebrity either. However if the arrest would have prevented others from lying they are a celebrity then the arrest would not be ridiculous. Keep in mind using someone else’s identity is a criminal offense as it should be. If someone’s a fan they can create a Fan Page for/about that celebrity and they don’t have to lie to the public they are that person. As far as I’m concerned Facebook has because of this become a big joke and a laughing stock. Or as one group on Facebook says, due to this it’s now known as Fakebook.

sana sadiq says:

report fake profile

my name is sana sadiq and i want to report a person who is using ma pictures as well as my name. am sending you my original profile link.
http://www.facebook.com/search/?q=sana+sadiq&o=2048&init=ffs#/profile.php?id=1002840930&ref=profile.
this is ma original link. you can check ma fotoz and plz finish the fake one.. ma original profile email address is sana_las@hotmail.com. am expecting a good response fron your side plz. thanku

Facebook know it all says:

Wow...

Most MySpace and Facebook celebrity profiles that are real are linked to their twitter accounts where they don’t have to deal with constant private messaging. Then there are their paid representatives who are told what they can post, usually adverts about upcoming music and movies or projects. Also, on Facebook they have what is known as community pages, not to be confused with fan pages, community pages are set up by Facebook. Then, every time you mention the person or thing it shows up on that community page whether you aloud it or not and whether they allow it or not. . When a real celeb joins Facebook, that community page becomes their own page, and it no linger says ” community page” You have to verify it is truly you to do this. Most celeb profiles are not searchable. They have special privalige. And people who are fakes and pretending to be a celeb with a real timeline. And not just a page can be very dangerous.

Add Your Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Have a Techdirt Account? Sign in now. Want one? Register here

Comment Options:

Make this the or (get credits or sign in to see balance) what's this?

What's this?

Techdirt community members with Techdirt Credits can spotlight a comment as either the "First Word" or "Last Word" on a particular comment thread. Credits can be purchased at the Techdirt Insider Shop »

Follow Techdirt

Techdirt Daily Newsletter

Techdirt Deals
Techdirt Insider Discord
The latest chatter on the Techdirt Insider Discord channel...
Loading...