What happens to your e-mail, Facebook, Twitter and other digital accounts
after you die has long been a question in the tech world. Some have even started
to create a digital estates to pass on the keys to their digital lives to an
executor or trustee.
But Google is now thinking ahead and making it easier for people to plan
what happens to that digital data after you pass. The company has announced its
Inactive Account Manager.
The tool allows users to decide what happens to their data on Google's
services -- Gmail, Blogger, Google Drive, Google+, Picasa Web Albums, Google
Voice and YouTube -- after they pass. You can decide to share access to those
accounts with friends or family members or have the account deleted.
"You can tell us what to do with your Gmail messages and data from several
other Google services if your account becomes inactive for any reason," Andreas
Tuerk, the product manager of the service, wrote on Google's blog today.
Instead of someone informing Google of your death, the service uses
inactivity as a barometer. You set the time of inactivity -- three, six, nine or
12 months -- and if you don't log into your account after that period Google
will do one of two things. You can have it alert up to 10 trusted friends or
contacts and choose to share your data with them or you can also just have it
set to delete your entire account.
Before the systems take any of those actions though, it will warn you via a
text message or an email to a secondary address. Of course, if you have died you
won't get that alert and it will then take action.
It might sound like a somber tool, but Google is now making it easier than
many other services when it comes to planning for your death in the digital
domain.
New Hampshire State Rep. Peter Sullivan introduced legislation in February
to allow the executor of an estate control over the social networking pages of
the dead. Five other states, including Oklahoma, Idaho, Rhode Island, Indiana
and Connecticut, have established legislation regulating one's digital presence
after death. Rhode Island and Connecticut were first, but their bills were
limited to email accounts, excluding social networking sites. With other
services, such as iTunes, some have started to set up digital trusts.
Beyond ownership, many services have popped up over the last couple of
months that address the issue of sending messages via social media services
after death. A Facebook app called "Ifidie" lets you set up a way to send out
Facebook messages to friends after you pass.
You identify a trustee who will confirm that you have died, and the
messages will be sent. _LivesOn is a Twitter service that will analyze your
tweets, allow you to train it, and will tweet for you after you are gone.
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