BEIJING – Chinese blogger and activist Michael Anti wants to know why  he is less worthy of a Facebook account than company founder Mark  Zuckerberg's dog.
Anti, a popular online commentator whose legal name  is Zhao Jing, said in an interview Tuesday that his Facebook account was  suddenly canceled in January. Company officials told him by e-mail that  Facebook has a strict policy against pseudonyms and that he must use  the name issued on his government ID.
Anti argues that his professional identity as Michael  Anti has been established for more than a decade, with published  articles and essays.
Anti, a former journalist who has won fellowships at  both Cambridge University and Harvard University, said he set up his  Facebook account in 2007. By locking him out of his account, Facebook  has cut him off from a network of more than 1,000 academic and  professional contacts who know him as Anti, he said.
"I'm really, really angry. I can't function using my  Chinese name. Today, I found out that Zuckerberg's dog has a Facebook  account. My journalistic work and academic work is more real than a  dog," he said.
Zuckerberg recently set up a Facebook page for  "Beast," complete with photos and a profile. Unlike Anti's, however, the  page for the puppy doesn't violate Facebook's policies because it's not  meant to be a personal profile page. Rather, it's a type of page  reserved for businesses and public figures that fans can "like" and  receive updates from on their own Facebook pages.
Facebook officials weren't available to comment on  the case. The company says its policy leads to greater trust and  accountability for its users.
"We have tried to keep the rule simple and fair by  saying personal profiles must always be set up in the real legal name of  the individual concerned," it said by e-mail to Anti.
Dissidents in a variety of countries have argued that  Facebook's policy can endanger human rights activists and others if  their identities become known.
Anti said there is a long tradition in China for  writers and journalists to take pen names, partly as protection from  retaliation from authorities. If Facebook requires the use of real  names, that could potentially put Chinese citizens in danger, he said.
"For my fellow Chinese, this policy could easily help Chinese police identify them," he said.
It's not the first time Anti has had problems with an  Internet site. In 2005, his blog on a Microsoft site was shut down by  the company following pressure from Chinese officials. Microsoft's  action led to a public outcry.
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Associated Press Technology Writer Barbara Ortutay in New York contributed to this report.
 
 
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