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Rehtaeh Parsons Photos Show Up In Facebook Dating Site Ads

Rehtaeh Parsons Photos Show Up In Facebook Dating Site Ads

Photos of Rehtaeh Parsons appeared Tuesday in Facebook ads for a dating site.

Toronto man Andrew Ennals was surfing the social media site Tuesday afternoon when he first saw the ad featuring Parsons. The 17-year-old teen died earlier this year after attempting suicide amid bullying that stemmed from a photo taken of her during an alleged sexual assault. Two Halifax teens face child pornography charges in the case.

Ennals wasn't the only Facebook user to spot the ads.

Ennals told HuffPost Canada he was so baffled by the ads that he did a Google image search to double-check that the image was really of Parsons.

"Then I was just horrified," Ennals said in an email.

"I think Facebook needs to remove it, of course, but it also I think shows some of the flaws with their algorithm for drawing in images," he said. "I can't imagine that any company would do this on purpose."

Parsons' father, Glen Canning, wrote on his blog that he was "completely bewildered and disgusted" by the ads.

Facebook told HuffPost Tuesday that the ads were in violation of its policies and have been removed and the company responsible has had its account blocked.

"This is an extremely unfortunate example of an advertiser scraping an image and using it in their ad campaign. This is a gross violation of our ad policies," a Facebook spokesperson said. "We apologize for any harm this has caused."

Canning told The Globe And Mail he was happy with Facebook's response, but that he was "still very upset this happened."

The ads were for ionechat.com, but led Canadian users to another dating site called be2.

As reported by Canada.com's William Wolfe-Wylie, be2's website says the company is based in Luxembourg and operates in 37 countries.

The companies involved may not have intended for Parsons to show up in their ads. Facebook told HuffPost that the photo could have come from anywhere on the web and that it was not an example of a profile photo being used in an advertisement.

Facebook does use profile photos "in connection with commercial, sponsored, or related content (such as a brand you like) served or enhanced by us." Users can opt out of these social ads.

The ads predictably sparked outrage on social media and it seems the anger has been heard loud and clear.

Facebook has been quick to remove offensive content in recent months. The website pulled a "Lac-Megantic Train Disaster Was Hilarious" page in July after being contacted by HuffPost.

Do you think Facebook is doing enough to remove objectionable content? Does the use of your images in advertising give you pause? Share your thoughts in the comments below.

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