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Fake Suicide Attempt Tests Facebook Prevention Tool, Lands Man In Asylum

First time accepted submitter abhishekmdb writes Shane Tusch faked his suicide in an attempt to test the authenticity of Facebook suicide prevention tool and got detained for 72 hours. Facebook has rolled out a set of tools to keep a check on its users who are having suicidal tendencies and prevent these users from suicidal attempts. In case some user is having suicidal thoughts and mentions that in the Facebook posts and if a friend of that user reports it to Facebook then a third party will immediately review the post and Facebook would lock the suicidal user's account and the user will be made to read Facebook's suicide prevention materials.

14 of 317 comments (clear)

  1. Great example by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    This is a prime example of how NOT to start a career in software testing.

    1. Re:Great example by ls671 · · Score: 5, Funny

      Don't worry I am pretty sure /. doesn't have a suicide prevention tool. It is far down the list after https/TLS support.

      The project has been delayed several times due to a high rate of false positive. It is really difficult to adapt off the selves suicide prevention software to /. audience.

      --
      Everything I write is lies, read between the lines.
    2. Re:Great example by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Since Facebook doesn't verify your identity when signing up for an account.... how long before the bad guys start setting up fake accounts or hacking FB accounts and ransoming people?

      Example would be: "Pay me $1000, or you will be picked up the police and put in mental institution. [insert pmt instructions]"

      New tool gives the bad guys the means.

    3. Re:Great example by Rei · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Worse, what I see as a lot more likely is people who see their friend's computer left logged into FB and want to prank them... these days they usually write some sort of embarassing post or message their friends. But if they would instead write a post talking about suicide, and then use their own accounts to alert Facebook...

      --
      "TAMS shouldn't be destroyed. They should just tag us before releasing us into the wild." -- Maeglin
    4. Re:Great example by DoofusOfDeath · · Score: 5, Funny

      No, it was delayed until Dice could run a story on women's under-representation in suicide rates.

    5. Re:Great example by Reziac · · Score: 4, Interesting

      The immediate effect I'd predict is more suicides, because the suicidal user who already believes they don't count because no one listens to them now has hard evidence that no one listens to what they have to say -- after all, they're just been silenced by Facebook.

      --
      ~REZ~ #43301. Who'd fake being me anyway?
  2. Oh, *BRILLIANT* by msobkow · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Take someone who is suicidal and crying out for help and to talk with their friends, and you block them from talking to anyone!

    Why not just had them a gun?

    --
    I do not fail; I succeed at finding out what does not work.
    1. Re:Oh, *BRILLIANT* by Dorianny · · Score: 4, Interesting

      I'm sorry, this whole thing sounds BS to me. While it makes sense to have the Authorities to look at and interview the victim^Hsoftware tester, putting a 72 hour mental health hold on someone is hard. You have to convince more than one person that you are serious. Most places don't want to hold people - it's a lot of paperwork, hassle and expense and there are enough genuine fruitcakes so as to leave few extra rooms at the inn. Even if he got tossed in on a hold, it would be reviewed after 24 hours.

      Either San Mateo does really weird things or this was made up.

      You are assuming that he was not complicit and wanted to be held for as long as possible. To me this whole thing sounds like a ploy for 15 minutes of infamy.

    2. Re:Oh, *BRILLIANT* by Znork · · Score: 4, Interesting

      You can find any number of stories about people without any acting skills convincing those professionals that they are psychotic. Frankly, it's just a question of presenting the correct initial criteria, of which the first one will be 'being delivered by the police', and confirmation bias will take care of the rest. Seeing a lot of pathology simply doesn't help that much when symptoms are as vague and subject to interpretation as they are with mental illness.

      Usually people seem to have a harder time convincing the professionals that they are, in fact, perfectly rational and not suffering from any serious mental illness. That will of course be an uphill battle against confirmation bias; they are, after all, in a psychiatric holding facility.

  3. The premise -- collectivism by Mr.CRC · · Score: 4, Insightful

    is of course, that you do not own your existence. So if you "threaten" suicide, you may be forced to continue living.

    I predict that there will be very little overall objection to this premise in the discussion that follows, as the present culture is rapidly converging toward the complete realization of the nightmare "the personal is the political" in which every aspect of everyone's life is going to be everyone else's business. With the individual a bit player.

    Exist, dammit, or we'll put you in prison!

    1. Re:The premise -- collectivism by sjames · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Nah, some people just give a shit about people who are not themselves.

  4. Let me get this straight - Facebook to the rescue? by mmell · · Score: 4, Funny
    Okay, I've seen everything. Somebody just shoot me. Shoot me now.

    Oh, wait . . .

  5. The right thing to do. by westlake · · Score: 5, Informative

    Five days ago, when SFGate reported this story, it was made quite clear that Tusch's friends were not in on the hoax and took it quite seriously ---

    and that someone reported it to the police independently of Facebook.

    A mans fake suicide post gets him detained

  6. Re: He got what he deserved. by JockTroll · · Score: 5, Funny

    Major Depression IS a person. I served under him for three years, starting when he was just a first lieutenant. Have some respect even if you're one of those clueless little shits who hate the military, because it's people like Major Depression who make it possible for you to kill yourself, you ungrateful dead.

    --
    Geeks are so full of shit that "beating the crap out of them" takes a whole new meaning.