We've heard from people in Florida, Texas, New York City and more. A user from South Korea even reached out.
From coast to coast, and around the world, people are accusing Meta of wrongfully disabling their accounts.
"You're the only ones covering this story," said Heather Holt from Fairbank, Iowa. "None of our local news affiliates have picked up on this."
Locked out of Instagram? 7 on Your Side looks into Meta account bans
Locked out of Instagram? Users who say they've been wrongfully suspended turn to 7 on Your Side
Holt makes a living taking family photos and high school portraits, but a few weeks ago she got a message saying her Facebook account has been suspended for violating "Community Standards on child sexual exploitation."
"It made me sick to my stomach. I photograph a lot of families. I am from a town of about 1,500 people," said Holt. "My first thought was, if this gets around that Facebook disabled me and accused me of that - I'm done. I am finished."
Holt appealed but says she quickly got a message saying, "Your review was unsuccessful," and "Your Facebook account has been permanently disabled."
She's now lost a way to communicate with some customers who booked shoots through Facebook Messenger.
"Now they go to message me on Facebook, they can't find me," Holt said. "They probably thought they got scammed."
DP Patel reached out to from Dallas, Texas. He runs a wedding planning business that specializes in South Asian style weddings.
On Wednesday, his professional Instagram account was suspended for not following "Community Standards on child sexual exploitation, abuse and nudity."
When 7 On Your Side asked Patel if he ever posted anything explicit, he responded with a quick "No."
"We are basically a wedding planning company," Patel said.
7 On Your Side Investigates again Thursday reached out to Meta, the parent company of Facebook and Instagram, to ask about Patel and Holt's suspensions and the suspended users in Southern California profiled in Wednesday's report.
We still have yet to get a response.
Meta did post on its blog Wednesday that it's taking "aggressive action" on accounts that break the rules.
The company says its "specialized teams" have removed nearly 135,000 Instagram accounts for leaving sexualized comments or requesting sexual images.
But those reaching out to 7 On Your Side Investigates maintain they have done nothing like that, so it's not yet clear to us if there's any connection.
Over the past 24 hours, some Meta verified users have also been reaching out to ABC7 saying that despite paying a monthly fee for that service, it hasn't helped them retrieve disabled accounts.
We have asked Meta to respond to that as well.