Haunting Facebook post emerges after young woman found dead on isolated beach

referring to BBCAnna England Kerr wrote an open letter to Facebook asking it to stop bombarding her with parenting adverts after the death of her baby daughter, Clara. After the BBC contacted Facebook for comment, England Kerr received a call from Nicola Mendelsohn, Facebook's vice president of EMEA. A British woman has given a powerful account of being unable to turn off targeted Facebook adverts after giving birth to a stillborn baby. England Kerr noticed that due to her online activity during her pregnancy, her Facebook feed was full of parenting ads. England Kerr found Facebook to be a useful tool following her bereavement, because through it she found support groups.


Haunting Facebook post emerges after young woman found dead on isolated beach

A young woman who was found dead on a quiet North Queensland beach had just months earlier shared a haunting message about the unfair dangers women face at any given moment. As the investigation into the pharmacy worker's death continues, a Facebook post that she shared earlier this year has come to light. Source: Facebook/Toyah Cordingley MoreMs Cordingley, whose large dog was found uninjured on Monday, would have been easily noticeable on what was traditionally a quiet stretch of sand, police said. Source: Facebook/Toyah Cordingley More"It may well be the case this young woman has run into a stranger or potentially a person known to her and circumstances have unfolded that have led to her death. Source: Facebook More"No young woman should go to a beach to walk the dog and this unfold for them," Detective Kinbacher said.

Haunting Facebook post emerges after young woman found dead on isolated beach

Facebook temporarily bans woman who called out store name with anti-Indigenous slur

referring to An Alberta woman found herself temporarily banned from Facebook this weekend after she called out a business owner whose company name includes a racial and gendered slur against Indigenous women. Rhiannon Babyn said when she first saw the page for "The Spunky Sq--w" online clothing store on Instagram and Facebook, she was incensed. Babyn wasn't the only one criticizing the store, which received a flood of negative comments. In 2017, two Alberta Health Services employees were fired after using the slur. And one month later, shirts featuring the word were pulled from Simons department store in downtown Calgary after complaints.





collected by :Roy Mark

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