Creepy Facebook users are stealing my identity and the social network 'couldn't care less', says prominent blogger.

Facebook takes a hard line when it comes to people using their real names, but it is not doing enough to stop those who steal others’ identities.

At least that’s according to prominent lifestyle blogger Rosie Thomas, also known as The Londoner.

This week one of Rosie's blog readers flagged a profile that used dozens of photos taken from her blog and her name, with regular posts interspersed with spam promotions for plastic surgery.

The first profile was linked to another for a "creepy husband character" that featured more of her pictures. According to 'his' profile he's a tutor at Oxford University and former member of One Direction.

This is not the first time it's happened to Rosie.

"It's incredibly frustrating! I have people send me these sort of profiles all the time," she told Mirror Online.

Some of the profiles are quite harmless and seem to be set up by people looking for virtual friends, but others are “significantly more sinister”.

“Pro-life supporters waging war against pro-choice individuals, extreme Christians proclaiming that the end is near and non-believers will burn for eternity… often they're trying to engage men and women for virtual sex, and then in this case pushing a plastic surgery company,” she added.

While there have been so many that the “shock factor has gone”, Rosie is concerned about who these impostors are messaging “and potentially grooming online”.

Rosie says she’s reported the profiles to Facebook through the internal system but the social network refused to remove it.

She finds the fact that she can’t speak to a real human “so frustrating”.

“With all the billions of dollars at Facebook you would think that they could hire a real person to look over these sort of complaints. They couldn't care less,” she told us.

“Online grooming and identity theft is a huge issue, and I don't see how such a big company with such a young user base can ignore the issue.”

Mirror Online contacted Facebook and the social network has since taken down one of the profiles.

"There is no place for harassment on Facebook," a Facebook spokesperson told Mirror Online.

"Sadly, there is a small number of malicious people who are intent on harming others online, just as they do offline.

"We believe that our authentic name culture makes it a safer environment for all and – as Rosie has done – we encourage people to report things that are upsetting to our highly trained team of safety experts who review every report in person.

"This was a mistake on our part and we apologise for any inconvenience caused”.

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