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  • question

    hephaestus1968 replied on October 21, 2009 16:52 to the question "facebook account disabled" in Facebook:

    hephaestus1968
    Facebook seems to aspire to the religious view that all humans are dirty stinkers who when given the chance sink to the depths of depravity - then again may be their auto-judging us all on their own standards. F__K FARCEBOOK
  • question

    A comment on the question "facebook account disabled" in Facebook:

    hephaestus1968
    Facebook seems faceless to me in relation to the robotic effects of FARCEbook trying to protect themselves from what their farcebots consider is ’spam’. One might have thought that people would use the same message on a large portion of friends saving time on re-writing BUT not FARCEbook who see it as a dangerous action. Sadly their farcebots can’t tell the difference from adverts and social connectivity of human beings – though one could think that checking up on private messages sent to friends to invite them to connect fell outside the scope of control and into the scope of privacy.
    Of course don’t get me started on someone being disabled not getting the right of reply – defending themselves with being able to collect their history and not knowing what the hell they’ve been ‘disabled’ – ‘crippled’ – cut off or whatever else you’d like to call it. I don’t know if anyone’s read Franz Kafka ‘The Trial” but it certainly seemed poignant to me FARCEbook appears very Kafkaesque. Faceless farce book! – hephaestus1968, on October 14, 2009 23:57
  • question

    hephaestus1968 replied on October 14, 2009 23:54 to the question "How can Facebook disabled my account for multi posting a MOTOCYCLE SAFETY video link?????" in Facebook:

    hephaestus1968
    Facebook seems faceless to me in relation to the robotic effects of FARCEbook trying to protect themselves from what their farcebots consider is ’spam’. One might have thought that people would use the same message on a large portion of friends saving time on re-writing BUT not FARCEbook who see it as a dangerous action. Sadly their farcebots can’t tell the difference from adverts and social connectivity of human beings – though one could think that checking up on private messages sent to friends to invite them to connect fell outside the scope of control and into the scope of privacy.
    Of course don’t get me started on someone being disabled not getting the right of reply – defending themselves with being able to collect their history and not knowing what the hell they’ve been ‘disabled’ – ‘crippled’ – cut off or whatever else you’d like to call it. I don’t know if anyone’s read Franz Kafka ‘The Trial” but it certainly seemed poignant to me FARCEbook appears very Kafkaesque. Faceless farce book!
  • question

    hephaestus1968 replied on October 14, 2009 23:47 to the question "!! HELP!! Facebook Disabled... NOW WHAT?!" in Facebook:

    hephaestus1968
    Facebook seems faceless to me in relation to the robotic effects of FARCEbook trying to protect themselves from what their farcebots consider is ’spam’. One might have thought that people would use the same message on a large portion of friends saving time on re-writing BUT not FARCEbook who see it as a dangerous action. Sadly their farcebots can’t tell the difference from adverts and social connectivity of human beings – though one could think that checking up on private messages sent to friends to invite them to connect fell outside the scope of control and into the scope of privacy.
    Of course don’t get me started on someone being disabled not getting the right of reply – defending themselves with being able to collect their history and not knowing what the hell they’ve been ‘disabled’ – ‘crippled’ – cut off or whatever else you’d like to call it. I don’t know if anyone’s read Franz Kafka ‘The Trial” but it certainly seemed poignant to me FARCEbook appears very Kafkaesque. Faceless farce book!
  • question

    hephaestus1968 replied on October 14, 2009 23:20 to the question "facebook account disabled" in Facebook:

    hephaestus1968
    Facebook seems faceless to me in relation to the robotic effects of FARCEbook trying to protect themselves from what their farcebots consider is 'spam'. One might have thought that people would use the same message on a large portion of friends saving time on re-writing BUT not FARCEbook who see it as a dangerous action. Sadly their farcebots can't tell the difference from adverts and social connectivity of human beings - though one could think that checking up on private messages sent to friends to invite them to connect fell outside the scope of control and into the scope of privacy.
    Of course don't get me started on someone being disabled not getting the right of reply - defending themselves with being able to collect their history and not knowing what the hell they've been 'disabled' - 'crippled' - cut off or whatever else you'd like to call it. I don't know if anyone's read Franz Kafka 'The Trial" but it certainly seemed poignant to me FARCEbook appears very Kafkaesque. Faceless farce book!
  • question

    hephaestus1968 replied on October 14, 2009 22:01 to the question "My Facebook account has been disabled by an administrator?" in Facebook:

    hephaestus1968
    Facebook seems faceless to me in relation to the robotic effects of FARCEbook trying to protect themselves from what their farcebots consider is 'spam'. One might have thought that people would use the same message on a large portion of friends saving time on re-writing BUT not FARCEbook who see it as a dangerous action. Sadly their farcebots can't tell the difference from adverts and social connectivity of human beings - though one could think that checking up on private messages sent to friends to invite them to connect fell outside the scope of control and into the scope of privacy.
    Of course don't get me started on someone being disabled not getting the right of reply - defending themselves with being able to collect their history and not knowing what the hell they've been 'disabled' - 'crippled' - cut off or whatever else you'd like to call it. I don't know if anyone's read Franz Kafka 'The Trial" but it certainly seemed poignant to me FARCEbook appears very Kafkaesque. Faceless farce book!