I'm curious what path the OP took, and how we could improve ranking here (I work at facebook, but not on help center). I imagine the majority of people who search for this are looking to memorialize an account, not un-memorialize it, so I think in general the current ranking is correct, even if it failed in this case.
[EDIT: as ldbrandy points out below, we're making it so this is the first thing you see when you log in as a memorialized account.]
Why not have a special "unmemorialize" button when the account is logged in? Either the person is really dead, in which case the user logging in is probably in charge of managing the remembrance and would not press the button, or the person is not dead and he/she is logging into their own account, which has been pranked.
Or, someone hacked the account. Identity theft of a deceased person is more disturbing than of a live individual - just imagine how friends of that person would feel if the account would start broadcasting that its owner is still alive.
On a related note, a friend of mine has a lot of what she posts flagged as abuse, both on her personal page and on a religious ministry page she's involved with (the posts are not abusive in any way.) Even though she's pretty much locked down her own account, comments she posts to friends' pages often get flagged, sometimes resulting in month-long bans. It seems obvious somebody out there has a grudge and is abusing the flag system; I'm frankly surprised they haven't used the memorial system yet.
A few of us have gone through this same search process, but haven't been able to find an official answer: is there some sort of appeals process? Is there some way to get a manual review, and perhaps some sort of block put in so that the same people can't keep flagging her?
If there is such a process, how can facebook improve the discoverability? If there isn't such a process, is there a person or department we can contact to intervene directly?
Facebook's Help Center isn't very helpful at least for reporting actual bugs. First off it's tucked away into a dropup in the lower part of the right hand column. The site seems to actively discourage you from report bugs (which may be what Facebook wants in terms of reducing the volume of help tickets).
I had a problem in Facebook's Mobile app (iPhone) where sometimes after uploading multiple pictures into a new album half the album wouldn't be displayed. To me it looked like some kind of memory/display refresh issue rather than Facebook not actually registering the images since if I could see the images if I looked at it through the photos album.
But I could not find anywhere to register a bug/problem and I eventually just gave up. I'm not sure if its been fixed since I stopped bothering to look for a way to reproduce it since there's no place to submit a bug fix anyways.
Subsequently I've found other small bugs on the site, for example a couple of days ago they made an update that moved the Facebook logo down 1px too much. Since they use a CSS sprite, some of the white from the Facebook logo below it was showing. How do I report that? Maybe they knew about it but it was about for 1.5-2 days (it's fixed now it seems).
One more annoying problem: As a developer, I know that other developers will want a lot of information about how the bug occurred and how to reproduce it. So I waited until I got home so I could submit the bug through their website. But if you goto the main website, they want you to go back to your phone and report it through the Mobile Help Center.
Maybe there is a place to submit it, but I've actually spent a decent amount of time looking for somewhere to send bug information to but I haven't found it.
Sorry to hijack, but hopefully someone at Facebook will read this and can suggest a solution.
In Facebook for iPhone, there is a way to report an issue: you can go to Help Center -> Something's Broken -> Report an Issue -> "please let us know", which then shows a page to file a report. It could be made even easier to find, but there is a way.
They can't be, at least not for "perjury", because "under penalty of perjury" has no force unless authorized by a court or, I guess, some specific statute.
The idea that you can stick the words "under penalty of perjury" on a random form to create a legal requirement for truthful answers is one of those Internet legal old-wives-tales, like adding "no copyright intended" to a Youtube upload.
However, if you report that someone else is dead, and they or their family suffer harm as a result, you can probably be sued easily, regardless of whether you use Facebook to make the report, or a carrier pigeon.
Not just while testifying in court. Statutes can also require declarations to be made under penalty of perjury. Valid DMCA notices, for example, must contain one.
Nice to see someone from FB apparently hopping on this right away and replying on SE. Having a more direct interface would be something for them to consider though as a lot of users aren't going to know how to raise an alert "where the techies wander".
If I search for "facebook memorialized" on the google, the first result takes me to https://www.facebook.com/help/?page=185698814812082, which has a link to the right page (though it's at the bottom)-:.
I'm curious what path the OP took, and how we could improve ranking here (I work at facebook, but not on help center). I imagine the majority of people who search for this are looking to memorialize an account, not un-memorialize it, so I think in general the current ranking is correct, even if it failed in this case.
[EDIT: as ldbrandy points out below, we're making it so this is the first thing you see when you log in as a memorialized account.]