Facebook
accidentally declared its founder Mark Zuckerberg and many other users
dead on Friday, acknowledging after fixing the problem that it had
committed a "terrible error."
"For a
brief period today, a message meant for memorialized profiles was
mistakenly posted to other accounts," a Facebook spokesperson told AFP.
"This was a terrible error that we have now fixed."
Media reports indicated that some two million errant memorials were posted on profile pages.
Even
Facebook co-founder and chief executive Zuckerberg was memorialized in a
message at his profile page expressing hope that people who loved him
would take comfort in posts people shared in tribute to his life.
"Poor Mark," read an @JudiD23 tweet that included weeping face emojis.
"Couldn't happen to a nicer guy."
The social network apologized and said it worked as quickly as possible to correct the problem.
"Damn.
I should have used Facebook Live to show how I was Facebook Dead,"
Search Engine Land editor Danny Sullivan said in a message fired off at
Twitter.
Facebook Live feature lets people broadcast video in real-time at the leading social network.
The
mistaken memorial notices contained links to forms that can be
submitted to have people's accounts at the leading social network
modified into online memorials after they die.
Part of the process is showing proof of death.
Some wondered whether the mishap was a botched test promotion of the feature, rather than a software glitch.
#FACEBOOKDEAD
Comments
tagged #FacebookDead or #FacebookRapture went viral at Twitter, with
people joking that the scenario marked a fitting end to tumultuous week.
"I think this is Facebook's way of flagging the people who died inside on Tuesday," read a tweet from @billkalpak.
A
darkly humorous post on Twitter by @JnPhillip was in the form of a note
reading "Dear Facebook, Donald Trump does
not get inaugurated until
January 20th. Nuclear annihilation occurs Jan. 21st."
"Naturally, Facebook waited until 2016 to kill us all," tweeted @kriheli.
Some
quipped that the mistake shook confidence in Facebook's feature for
checking on people after disasters, or its claim that hoax stories are
not a worry at the social network.
A
not-dead-yet Zuckerberg defended the integrity of News Feed stories
doing an on-stage chat at a Techonomy conference in California the night
before being memorialized on his profile page.
Zuckerberg rejected the idea that bogus stories shared at the social network paved a path of victory for President-elect Trump.
"The
idea that fake news on Facebook, which is a very small amount of the
content, influenced the election in any way I think is a pretty crazy
idea," Zuckerberg said during an on-stage chat at the conference.
The
News Feed at Facebook has evolved from early days of being about
sharing personal tidbits with friends or family to becoming a platform
for important news.
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