Mackay had denied running the page, but the page has conveniently been altered or taken down when investigators have pinpointed the man's involvement.

The bigger concern may be Facebook's own response. Payment services Classy, Donorbox, PayPal and Patreon all suspended the fake page's fundraising campaigns before or soon after CNN got in touch, but the news outlet claims that Facebook didn't suspend the page (by suspending an administrator) until after a week of back-and-forth discussion. It initially didn't think the page violated policies at all, but eventually changed its mind. Moreover, BLM co-founder Patrisse Cullors asked Facebook to take down the scam page months ago.

When asked for comment, Facebook said only that it had created "several techniques" to find and stop fake activity, and that its teams reviewed them to take "appropriate action." These include new machine learning methods that have helped catch "more than a half-million accounts."

It's important to stress that this isn't exclusively a Facebook problem -- there has been more than one bogus BLM account on Twitter, including others that are still active as of this writing. Really, the issue is that Facebook and other social networks continue to have difficulty spotting and dealing with fake pages. This also highlights recurring trouble with social sites' reactions to policy violators -- they sometimes only take action when an issue reaches the media.

Update: Classy said that CNN was initially incorrect, and that it had disabled transactions "long before" the news network got in contact.

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