THE NEW YORK TIMES INTERNATIONAL EDITION TUESDAY, AUGUST 27, 2019 | 7
Business
For a decade, Christopher Reeves, an
Uber driver in Seattle, used Facebook
for everything: talking with friends,
communicating with fellow drivers,
meeting singles. But one day in June, as
he was uploading photos from a comic
book convention and a family trip to Dis-
neyland, he found himself abruptly
logged out.
When Mr. Reeves, 32, tried to sign
back in, the Facebook page said that his
account had been disabled. It requested
a photo to verify his identity. He took a
selfie with his iPhone, but Facebook re-
jected it, as well as several other self-
portraits. Eventually he gave up and
sought out a page in Facebook’s help
center for people who think their ac-
counts have been disabled by mistake.
He provided his name, email address
and a photo of his driver’s license.
Days passed. Mr. Reeves heard noth-
ing. He searched in vain for a way to talk
to a human at Facebook. He sent Twitter
messages to Facebook and was ignored.
After a week of growing increasingly
frustrated, he went to Facebook’s office
in downtown Seattle, where, he recalled,
five receptionists sat behind a counter in
the lobby.
“My account got disabled, and I need
help,” he said. The workers told him no
one could assist him.
“What if my account doesn’t get reac-
tivated?” Mr. Reeves asked, desperate.
A receptionist advised him to make a
new profile. (That’s against Facebook’s
terms of service, which specify that us-
ers “create only one account (your
own).”)
Mr. Reeves created a new account,
but it was disabled within hours; when
he made yet another one, it was disabled
within minutes. It’s now been three
months, and he has no idea why he’s still
unable to log in.
“Life is rather dull without Facebook,”
Mr. Reeves said.
While many users are abandoning
Facebook, fed up with what seems like a
never-ending series of privacy vio-
lations, a small number find themselves
in the opposite position. They’ve been
kicked off the platform, and no matter
how hard they try — and they try really,
really hard — they can’t get back on.
In March, Jessica May, 33, an activist
based in Maryland, found herself logged
out by Facebook and presented with a
request for identification. Ms. May was-
n’t surprised; trolls often falsely re-
ported her for violating the site’s rules,
and she had been through the account
reactivation process many times. This
time, though, Ms. May’s attempts to re-
gain access didn’t work. She’s now sign-
ing into Facebook with a second, profes-
sional account that she created a couple
of years ago but rarely used.
When Ms. May researched the issue
online, she found countless others in the
same position. “You’re holding our so-
cial network hostage, along with our
memories,” she complained in a
YouTube video she posted in hopes that
someone from Facebook would see it. “I
have so much to say and so much to
share. What the hell did I do? I just want
to know. But it’s radio silence.”
In Facebook’s version of a justice sys-
tem, users are told only that their ac-
counts have been disabled for “suspi-
cious activity.” If they appeal — via a
terse form that will accept only a name,
contact information and an image of an
ID — a mysterious review process be-
gins. The wait can be endless, and the in-
ability to contact a Facebook employee
maddening. Increasingly agitated,
Facebook castaways turn for help to
Twitter, Reddit, Quora, message boards
and, well, me. Because I have a history
of writing about (and sometimes solv-
ing) people’s troubles with the platform,
profoundly addicted Facebook users
have found their way to my inbox, email-
ing multiple times a day for updates
about their cases, which I do not have.
With more than two billion active
members, Facebook has long been criti-
cized for allowing bad actors to prolifer-
ate on its platform, including violent ex-
tremists and identity thieves. In May,
the company announced that it disabled
more than three billion “fake accounts”
over a six-month period. “Our intent is
simple: find and remove as many as we
can while removing as few authentic ac-
counts as possible,” wrote Alex Schultz,
Facebook’s vice president for analytics,
in an accompanying post.
It’s possible that users like Mr. Reeves
and Ms. May were caught up in the
sweep. But the number of people com-
plaining about disabled Facebook ac-
counts has been going up for years, ac-
cording to data from the Federal Trade
Commission, which tracked three such
complaints in 2015, 12 in 2016, and more
than 50 in each of the last two years.
Once Facebook disables an account,
Mr. Schultz wrote, it keeps the person
behind it from rejoining by deploying
“advanced detection systems” that look
for “patterns of using suspicious email
addresses, suspicious actions, or other
signals previously associated with other
fake accounts we’ve removed.”
Travis Hinton, a dishwasher in New
York who has used Facebook since 2012
to stay in touch with friends and to write
posts about abandoned subway sta-
tions, found this out the hard way. After
his account was disabled in July, he tried
repeatedly to create new accounts using
a series of new email addresses and
found that the new accounts were dis-
abled almost immediately.
Mr. Hinton, 34, found the company’s
phone number and called it. “For
customer support, press 1,” said a voice
recording. Hinton pressed 1. “Thank you
for calling Facebook user operations,”
he heard. “Unfortunately, we do not of-
fer phone support at this time.” Then his
line went dead. (This is still the message
a caller receives.)
Mr. Hinton is incensed at being locked
out of Facebook. He’s repeatedly
tweeted obscenities at Facebook on
Twitter and written angry, profane com-
ments on Mark Zuckerberg’s Instagram
posts. (Mr. Hinton didn’t lose his access
to that social network, even though it is
owned by Facebook.) He also tries to
create new Facebook accounts — on dif-
ferent computers and phones, and at dif-
ferent locations — on a weekly basis,
only to find them disabled within min-
utes.
“Keeping our platform safe from bad
actors is our highest priority,” said a
Facebook spokeswoman. “Our detec-
tion technology isn’t perfect and some-
times we make mistakes. But we offer
people the tools they need to regain ac-
cess.”
When Facebook reviewed 14 disabled
accounts belonging to users contacted
by The New York Times, the company
said that just five had been banned with
cause. Facebook suggested that the oth-
ers should simply go through the ap-
peals process again; most did, but none
of their accounts have been reactivated
so far.
Some of the excommunicated have
woeful tales, such as Colton Berk, 23, a
barista in Portland, Ore.
His account was disabled in 2017, a
few months after his older brother was
killed in a car accident. “It was a real
panic moment,” Mr. Berk said. “I hadn’t
saved a lot of photos that I had posted of
my older brother and me, and I lost it
all.” He appealed to Facebook, which
told him that his account was perma-
nently disabled for “fraudulent activity.”
Mr. Berk has since gotten back online
with an alias: Bolton Cerk. “I had to as-
sume a fraudulent identity to rejoin,” he
said. “Ironically, I am now doing what
they accused me of.”
One Facebook user in Sweden found a
way to reach a human at Facebook after
his account was disabled. His first name
is Jonatan; he asked that his last name
not be published, so that he wouldn’t be
contacted by a deluge of other users
seeking help. “I did it through the job ap-
plications,” he said, laughing. Jonatan
went to Facebook’s careers page and
filled out an application for a lead devel-
oper position, but instead of talking
about his qualifications, he wrote about
not being able to reactivate his disabled
account.
A couple of days later, Jonatan got an
email from a Facebook recruiter who
told him that, while it wasn’t the proper
channel for the problem, he would look
into Jonatan’s account. It was soon reac-
tivated. “I rarely use Facebook now,” he
said.
Mr. Reeves, of Seattle, is not so blasé.
After reviewing his account at the re-
quest of The Times, Facebook deter-
mined he was inadvertently “caught in a
security checkpoint.”
But Mr. Reeves remained stuck in
purgatory. At one point in early August,
he apologized for contacting me so of-
ten, explaining that he was “desperate”
to have his account reactivated by Aug.
15, his birthday.
On Aug. 14, Reeves went back to the
Seattle Facebook office to beg them
again for attention. The receptionists re-
peated that they couldn’t help him, and
said that no one in customer support
worked in the building. “I was frus-
trated, but I stayed calm,” Mr. Reeves
told me. “I didn’t scream or anything. I
didn’t want to spend my birthday in jail.”
Kicked off Facebook and wanting back on
They don’t know why
they’re barred and can’t
find anyone to tell them
BY KASHMIR HILL
SARAH MAZZETTI
“I had to assume a fraudulent
identity to rejoin. Ironically,
I am now doing what they
accused me of.”
IPhones haven’t been selling particu-
larly well, Apple reported this summer,
but its watches are becoming wildly
popular. And no wonder.
The Apple Watch is elegant and
versatile, and it frequently gains new
powers. It can track the distance you
run, measure the noise you hear on the
street, record your heartbeat, play
your favorite tune and place a phone
call. (Yes, it can even tell time.)
New models of the watch, and of the
iPhone, are expected in September.
How they fare in the marketplace will
help to determine whether Apple con-
tinues to be one of the most valuable
companies in the world.
But impressive though the con-
stantly updated Apple Watch may be, I
don’t wear one, at least not yet. In-
stead, I’m sticking with a classic Casio.
In its own modest way, it is a marvel,
too.
Casio says my spare, black,
monochromatic watch will operate
smoothly for at least seven years
without needing a battery charge. And
the Casio watch is uncannily accurate.
It doesn’t gain or lose more than three
minutes in an entire year.
Perhaps most important, it is aston-
ishingly cheap, a claim that I wouldn’t
make for any Apple product. The
F-91W Casio that I wear has a list price
of $18.95; I bought it for less than $11.
A slightly more elaborate sport watch,
the DW-290 favored by the special
counsel Robert S. Mueller III and his
deputies, can be bought for about $35.
Those are bargain-basement prices
compared with the $279 to $1,499 that
Apple charges for the current models
of its watch.
In this era of rampant planned obso-
lescence, the Casio watch remains a
remarkable outlier: a once-advanced
device that has been available for a
quarter-century and
still does exactly
what it was designed
to do.
Still, my Casio is
limited in what it can
do: It is just a watch.
Basically, it reports
the time, date and
day of the week, and
it functions as a little
alarm clock and as a
stopwatch. Press a
button and it lights up in the dark. I’ve
worn it in the shower, in swimming
pools and in the ocean, although such
behavior isn’t recommended. The
watch isn’t guaranteed to survive
immersion.
Sturdy as it is, the watch won’t last
forever. You can replace the battery
and the plastic resin watch band, but
I’ve found that doing so can be tedious.
Since Casio introduced the F-91W in
1989, I’ve owned several, and some of
its cousins, which date to the 1970s.
Casio called them technological mir-
acles back then. It is their continued
availability at reasonable prices, not
their aging technology, that makes
them minor miracles today.
Replacing the originals was my
choice over the decades; it wasn’t
forced on me by Casio.
“Repairing devices is better for the
planet than buying new ones,” said
Kyle Wiens, a founder of iFixit, a web-
site with do-it-yourself manuals and
other resources geared toward teach-
ing “people how to fix almost any-
thing.” Mr. Wiens contrasted Casio,
which makes battery replacement a
straightforward if delicate task, with
companies like Apple, which directs
consumers to the company’s own
stores or certified technicians.
“These companies are deliberately
making it more difficult for people to
repair their devices,” he said. “And
they push people to replace existing
devices that work perfectly well. That’s
planned obsolescence.”
Michael Waldman, a Cornell Univer-
sity economics professor, expanded on
that idea.
“I would define ‘planned obsoles-
cence’ as the practice of coming out
with innovations more quickly than is
efficient from the standpoint of social
welfare,” he said. “For a company, it’s a
way of maximizing profits, perhaps at
some cost to consumer welfare.” By
that definition, he said, Apple is engag-
ing in planned obsolescence, while
Casio is not.
Consider what will most likely hap-
pen in the fall, when Apple introduces
new operating systems. The company
says iPhones that can handle that
update will be able to operate in “dark
mode.” That should cut back on emis-
sions of light and, perhaps, ease eye
strain.
I’d like to use dark mode but I can’t,
unless I reach for my wallet. That’s
because my iPhone 6, and older
iPhones and iPads, won’t be compati-
ble with iOS 13.
If you’ve got an older Apple device,
though, at some point it won’t be able
to do everything it does now. I’ve
experienced that with an older iPad
Mini. Eventually, I found that it could
no longer display all of the news re-
ports to which I subscribed, and I
replaced it. That will probably happen
with my iPhone 6.
As I wrote last year, I’ve been able to
hold onto the phone this long only
because of a battery replacement
program that Apple instituted after
reports that it was throttling the
speeds of older devices. The company
is being sued by people who accuse it
of deliberately shortening the working
life of its products. Apple denies the
accusations.
These days, in an effort to encourage
purchases of new phones, Apple is
buying back older iPhones that it
refurbishes and resells, often to people
living outside the United States.
Is it coincidental that just as iPhone
sales have stalled, Apple is effectively
pushing people like me into buying
new phones? Maybe. But using multi-
ple levers — style shifts, marketing
and changes in design — to persuade
consumers to replace products is an
effective and longstanding strategy.
That’s not true for just Apple, but for
other technology companies, carmak-
ers and razor blade manufacturers.
Planned obsolescence has been prac-
ticed for decades but it has been ele-
vated into a corporate art form.
That’s why it seems to me that sim-
ply creating good, inexpensive prod-
ucts that rarely need to be replaced
has become an extraordinary accom-
plishment. Yet Casio, whose sales have
been flagging, doesn’t boast about its
practices. The company declined to
comment for this column.
The stock market favors Apple’s
approach, not Casio’s. In the five years
through Wednesday, Casio’s share
price has dropped more than 20 per-
cent. The price of Apple stock has
more than doubled in that time.
Daniel A. Levinthal, a professor of
corporate strategy at the Wharton
School of the University of Pennsylva-
nia, said: “Given a choice, most com-
panies would rather be in the position
of Apple, which has been innovating
and successfully developing new prod-
ucts and bringing them to market and
getting consumers to buy them — than
in the position of Casio, which has been
much less successful at that, even if it
is selling some fine products.”
That makes the retro Casio watch
even more special. It doesn’t belong
entirely to this time.
Planned obsolescence becomes an art form
Strategies
JEFF SOMMER
The Casio F-91W watch is a marvel in its own modest way. But the stock market prefers
Apple’s approach to technology, which brings frequent product turnover.
TONY CENICOLA/THE NEW YORK TIMES
Using varied
levers to
persuade
consumers
to replace
products is
an effective
strategy.