A recent conversation with friends revolved around the question “what happens to all your social network stuff when you die?” I know the topic sounds grim (although I assure you the conversation wasn’t), but it’s an interesting issue and one that everyone should give some thought to. After all, as Steve Jobs said, death is a destination we all share.
I had looked into this question a few years ago and found
that it truly presented problems for relatives when loved ones passed away.
Often there was much material online that family members either might not know
about, or lacked the means to remove or otherwise archive or care for. Social
media sites, in the early days, had no good ways of dealing with it either.
This led to pages of the deceased lingering in a kind of online
limbo. I recall an article in the NY Times called “As Facebook Users Die,Ghosts Reach Out” from 2010 that stated “Facebook says it has been grappling
with how to handle ghosts in the machine but acknowledges that it has not found
a good solution.” That was then.
Having rechecked this issue now, I can assure you that
things have gotten a whole lot better. All the sites I checked – Facebook,
Twitter, YouTube, LinkedIn, Pinterest – had policies in place and much has been
written on the subject. Wikipedia even has an article “Death and the Internet”
about it. The problem I saw years ago has been solved, and if not perfectly, at
least adequately.
There are two ways to address the online presence of a
loved one who has passed. Delete his accounts altogether or convert them to a
memorial status for a period of time so that friends and relatives can share
their grief and celebrate his life. Facebook allows either option, and has a
form that must be filled in to report a death; you’ll have to search for it in
the help section but it’s there. I think the memorial page is a good idea and I
predict it will become the option of choice. As we all use sites like FB to
play out a part of our public lives, it makes sense for others to use it to
gather and share. These pages should not grow stale from neglect, and neither
should they be deleted without ceremony.
Other sites deactivate accounts upon request (Twitter) or
after a long period of inactivity (Dropbox). There are also ways to download a
copy of the content for you to save, rather than having it ultimately
disappear. I found this graphic on lifehacker to be helpful in summarizing the
policies of the major sites.
All sites require that the person requesting the change
prove in some way that the person has passed on. This is not something that
anyone can do as a prank, and every site takes action only when assured the request
is legit. Many require a copy of a death certificate, or a link to an obituary
online. People, not software, handle these requests on a case by case basis. It’s
an extensive responsbility too, since one stat I found stated that over 10,000
Facebook users die every day. (Wow, BTW.)
We should all plan for this eventuality ourselves, just
as we prepare wills, end-of-life directives and the rest. As a start, I
recommend making a list of ALL your online accounts, with usernames and
passwords and leaving it for your executor or spouse. (You can seal it in an
envelope if you like.) Although it’s technically wrong for someone else to log
in as you, even after death, it’s a head start in getting one’s arms around
what will undoubtedly be an unhappy and complicated chore. Untangling all those
accounts, including banking and much more, is a daunting task. Don’t make it
harder on your loved ones than it has to be.
1 comment:
Great blog! Hope to not use this info anytime soon...
Post a Comment