Houston woman Meryem Ali has filed a $123-million lawsuit against both Facebook and a former friend who posted a picture of her on an "imposter" Facebook profile under her name, according to Texas Lawyer.

Photographs "that depict the true face of plaintiff" were altered with Photoshop and "attached to false, phony, naked body shots, and at least one pose where there is plaintiff in a graphic pornographic-like photo," states the complaint, which was filed on July 25 in Harris County.

"These phony photos falsely and maliciously depicted plaintiff in a clearly derogatory and false light ... as some overly bold and overly aggressive sexual person, which plaintiff in fact and truth is not," writes Ali's lawyer.

Facebook didn't respond to an inquiry from Texas Lawyer about the case. The lawsuit alleges that Facebook didn't take down the Photoshop jobs until mid-February, after the social networking company was contacted by Houston police. Ali found out about the profile page in December 2013 from family and friends.

Ali's lawsuit goes on to state that she wants to "expose the frailties and failures of the falsely advertised and falsely promoted privacy mechanisms" of Facebook.

Facebook has paid "tens of millions due to privacy concern violations," and it must "stand up, take notice and pay attention to the serious privacy violations concerns involved in revenge porn situations," the suit states.

Ali is demanding 10 cents in damages for every one of Facebook's 1.23 billion users—hence, the $123 million total.

"It's a pretty serious situation," Ali's lawyer told Texas Lawyer. "She is obviously very mad about what happened, very upset."

While a Photoshop job portraying Ali engaged in sexual acts is certainly crude, it doesn't fit the traditional definition of "revenge porn." That term is typically used when nude pictures of the actual victim are posted online without his or her consent. In some situations, such postings have been done by jilted ex-lovers.

Ali may have some kind of case against her former friend, depending on what he put on the "imposter" page. But it will be hard to get any kind of payout at all from Facebook, much less the headline-grabbing figure in the Ali v. Facebook complaint. Most web platforms have legal protection from their users' actions under Section 230 of the Communications Decency Act.