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The employee at Ping Pong Music who had his drivers' license inadvertently published by Facebook for all the world to see tells us he's discovered at least two more licenses exposed by the site. He found one on the Facebook page for music group Switchfoot and the other on the page for Ben Kweller. Facebook allows musicians and their labels to promote music through official Musician Pages, but before allowing them to upload music, Facebook requires the page administrators to submit identification in case of copyright .The Ping Pong Music employee tells us he's tried to contact Facebook about the problem — sending four emails and calling four times — but all he's gotten in response so far is the following brushoff via email:

Hi [Redacted], We sincerely apologize for this issue and are working to resolve it as quickly as possible. In the meantime, I recommend disabling fan photos through the Photos application editing interface by selecting "Do not allow fans to add photos". This will hide any current fan photos from view. We'll let you know as soon as we have more information. Thanks for contacting Facebook, Jack Customer Operations Facebook

"The email they sent me was completely useless," our source complains, "Since I, as anyone would, had already taken those steps Thursday night when I noticed my license." He says what really bothers him is that Facebook's error can't be blamed on a computer bug:

When I had submitted my license last fall, I originally was using the upload-form they provided within Facebook, but that upload form was defective, and customer support told me back then to directly email them. I did. A real person at Facebook had a scan of my license in their inbox since the upload-form system wasn't working properly the week they launched the service. A real person could've caused all this.

Our source says all he wants its "a public formal apology and some form of retribution for the troubles and slight panic they've caused." Otherwise, when he approaches Facebook again, "I might be doing it with a legal team."