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(A different) Mark Zuckerberg is suing Meta
Mark S. Zuckerberg says even restaurants cancel his reservations because people think he’s joking.

It sounds like a clickbait headline, but it’s very real: Mark Zuckerberg is suing… Mark Zuckerberg.
Specifically, Mark S. Zuckerberg, a bankruptcy lawyer from Indiana, has filed a lawsuit against Meta and its famous CEO, Mark E. Zuckerberg, after years of being mistaken for an impersonator of himself.
Here’s the problem: the lawyer runs a Facebook page to promote his law practice.
He’s spent more than $11,000 advertising on the platform, but Meta’s moderation bots have repeatedly flagged him as a fraud, apparently convinced that the only true Mark Zuckerberg must be the hoodie-wearing billionaire from Silicon Valley.
His page has been disabled five times in eight years, cutting him off from clients while his ad dollars keep flowing into Meta’s pockets.
“It’s not funny,” the lawyer told Indianapolis station 13WTHR. “Not when they take my money. This really pissed me off.”
And yet, it’s hard not to see the dark comedy in his predicament.
In one 2020 email to Meta, he joked, “If you happen to run into the younger, richer Mark Zuckerberg, tell him I said hi. He causes me great aggravation each day.”
The attorney has even documented his ongoing identity crisis on a website, iammarkzuckerberg.com, where he details the daily chaos of sharing a name with one of the most recognizable tech figures in the world.
Restaurant reservations get canceled because people think he’s joking. Phone calls get cut short by disbelief.
His life, he says, feels like that old Michael Jordan ESPN ad, where an ordinary guy with a famous name can’t catch a break.
Still, being Mark Zuckerberg isn’t all bad. The lawyer is well-regarded in bankruptcy law and occasionally gets flown out for speaking gigs.
The only hitch? When a limo driver once held up a “Mark Zuckerberg” sign in Las Vegas, the crowd expected the Mark Zuckerberg and was very disappointed to see a bankruptcy attorney instead.
Meta has acknowledged the mix-up, telling 13WTHR, “We know there’s more than one Mark Zuckerberg in the world, and we are getting to the bottom of this.”
In the meantime, the Indiana lawyer can at least claim one small victory: he outranks the billionaire on Google searches for “Mark Zuckerberg bankruptcy.”
Should Meta’s AI moderation systems be better at distinguishing between real people and impersonators, especially when someone is paying for advertising? Do you think this lawsuit highlights bigger problems with how tech platforms handle identity verification, or is this just an unfortunate but rare edge case? Tell us below in the comments, or reach us via our Twitter or Facebook.
