The Bitche is BACK! Facebook restores official page for a French town called Bitche after accidentally removing it because of its 'offensive' name
Facebook mistakenly took down the official page for a French town called Bitche, after its algorithms dubbed the name as offensive.
The official page for Bitche, a town in northeastern France near the border with Germany, was removed on March 19, but has only just been addressed by Facebook.
Facebook France said the mistake was made 'following an incorrect analysis on the part of our systems'.
It has since apologised for the embarrassing error and restored the page.
Earlier this year, Facebook apologised for banning users from mentioning National Trust beauty spot Devil's Dyke near Brighton after branding it ‘hate speech'.

The French town of Bitche (pictured) has had frustrating problems getting past Facebook's automated detection technology

Bitche is a town in northeastern France near the border with Germany with a population of around 5,000
A Facebook spokesperson told MailOnline that the page was removed in error and was restored on Tuesday morning.
The mistake – reported by local broadcaster Radio Melodie – forced Bitche municipal communications officer Valerie Degouy to create a new page under another name earlier this month.
Degouy said the new page was named after the town's post code, Mairie 57230, to get past Facebook's automated moderating system.
'I tried to reach out to Facebook in every possible way, through different forms, but there's nothing [I could] do,' Degouy said.
She added that she 'already had issues when [she] first created the page'.
The town's original page is once again active, and on Tuesday posted a statement regarding the debacle.
The statement, translated to English, reads: 'Facebook had censored our Bitche City page.
'We appealed and tried to contact Facebook through various means, including through contact forms and private messages on Facebook France's page.
Laurent Solly, President General Manager of Facebook France, personally contacted Bitche Mayor Benoît Kieffer to inform him that the page has been published again and to apologise for any inconvenience caused.
The Bitche is back: The town's official page is once again active, and on Tuesday posted a statement regarding the debacle

The charming French town of Bitche is known for its large citadel originating from a castle built at the beginning of the 13th century
Kieffer said: 'The name of our town seems to suffer from a bad interpretation … the most astonishing thing is that Facebook took so long to correct this.'
'What has happened to the town of Bitche demonstrates the insufficient and limited moderating tools that only the human gaze can appreciate,' he said.
Kieffer did add, however, that Bitche would welcome Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg 'to discover our pretty fortified city.
As noticed by Politico, another town in the region, Rohrbach-lès-Bitche, took preventive measures and renamed its page 'Ville de Rohrbach'.
The town said in a post of its own: 'We wanted to explain the name change of the page.
'Far from us the idea of denying the name of our beautiful village... but it is to see that Facebook seems to be hunting the term.
'We preferred to anticipate rather than risking a page closure.'
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