Send a cease and desist letter for defamation One of the steps a lawyer might recommend when dealing with slander on social media is sending a cease and desist letter. A cease and desist letter on social media is a document that formally requests the author to stop engaging in defamatory or harmful behavior.
The answer is yes, but you have to meet each of the four legal elements that define defamation of character. Your lawyer also has to present convincing evidence not only that the defendant made defamatory statements on Facebook but also that the statement has damaged your personal and/or professional reputation.
You can complain to Facebook about the defamatory statements, for all the good it might do. Otherwise, if you can prove that the business knows the statements to be false and is making them with malice (Ie the intent to materially damage you), that's libel and you have some legal remedies available to you.
Consider reaching out to the person privately, expressing your concerns and asking them to stop. If that doesn't work, report the defamatory comments to Facebook, providing evidence if possible.
Facebook lets the person whose content has been reported know that a report has been made, but they do not let the person know who reported them.
When something gets reported to Facebook, Facebook reviews the related post and removes anything that contravenes their Community Standards. Reporting a post is anonymous and Facebook doesn't include any information about the person who filed the report when they reach out to the account reported.
When something gets reported to Facebook, we'll review it and take action on anything we determine doesn't follow our Community Standards. Unless you're reporting an incident of intellectual property infringement, your report will be kept confidential and the account you reported won't see who reported them.
No, Facebook doesn't tell people that you've seen their profile.
Address It Directly: If appropriate, consider confronting the person spreading the slander. Approach them calmly and express how their words have affected you. Sometimes, a direct conversation can resolve misunderstandings. Seek Support: Talk to trusted friends, family, or colleagues about the situation.
The number of times something is reported doesn't determine whether or not it's removed from Facebook. We use the same guidelines each time we review whether a profile goes against our Community Standards.