A ticketing manufacturer has urged social media users to be more aware of disintegration after a video, claiming that he was dead, which was viewed 650,000 times.
22 -year -old Grace Wolsteinhole has received 1.3 million followers for his video since 2021 who talks about living with cerebral palsy.
The use of one of her most popular videos appeared to sell the pillow by an account without her permission, and the caption was given: “I had lost my autistic sister today, so I bought to buy her to buy this pillow.”
Tiktok confirmed that the video was removed to violate his community guidelines. Despite several attempts, the BBC has been unable to contact the user who has shared the video.
“There are a lot of bad people on social media, so you need to examine the facts,” Ms. Wolsteinhole said, which divides her time between Essex and London.
His original video posted in 2021 has been liked 5.2 million times and shows him to throw a punch and fall into the gym class while working with an individual trainer.
Ms. Wolsteinhole said that she became aware of its reuse in the rotation of the death uploaded in May when someone knows that she contacts her mother to pass on her sensations.
Ms. Wolsteinholam was placing a low profile online as she was unwell for about three months, which she said that the Haux appeared really.
“People were commenting saying that ‘Rest in Peace, Grace. I love you’. People were severely destroyed after listening to which I was dead.”
She said that she had lost thousands of followers and people had seen a decline in ideas, assuming that she was dead, which reduced her income.
Tikokok Awards its most popular creators By paying them on the basis of video visual and engagement.
Ms. Wolsteinhole said that she was also disappointed with further dissolution.
“My disability is not autism, it is a cerebral palsy. So my disability went wrong, and said I was dead,” he said.
Ms. Wolsteinhole said that after contacting someone on Instagram, the fake video was removed from Tiktok, which had the same user name.
But it was re -prepared during the days of Ticketkok and the user sent a series of aggressive messages to Ms. Wolsteinhole.
After contacting the BBC, Tikokok removed the video, and said it was violated Community Guidelines,
It did not comment on the concerns of Ms. Wolsteinhole around the distribution sharing on the stage.
‘Triggering’
Ms. Wolsteinhole said that her followers were “deeply disgusting” which happened.
“It is triggering my followers to see because some of my followers suffer from their mental health,” she said.
Another video was posted by the same ticket account to make fun of Ms. Wolsteinholm’s disability.
Tiktok and Instagram account and their affiliated websites are no longer active.
The name of the business was not of any limited company registered in the company house and the VAT number it was displayed was not related to any UK business.
The BBC called and emailed the shop using the contact details found on its website, but did not find any response, and failed failed to make a ticket account and another profile that appeared to be matching the person in the video.
Ms. Wolsteinholme reported harassment to the Metropolitan Police, which confirmed that it was searching for “many lines of investigation”.
A police spokesperson said: “The victim has been supported by the authorities. No arrests have been made at this level.”
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