in days past when one passed on (either thru natural causes or accident or <diety> forbid suiside) the persons left behind could literally go through a person life via a papertrail that was that persons life. For example the various legal documents (such as inusrance policies, wills, deeds, etc.), a person's writings or journals, bank accounts, investment stuff, photographs, music/audio and (more recently) video collection, and other such items.
now-a-days so much of the lives of people is spent/recorded on-line that this brings to light a new and quite different "trail" to be followed. as it stands today most younger person live their lives on-line and have loads of info "out in the cloud". so what happens when the people left behind want to access that information in the cloud.
right now it seems there is few legal decisions or president on how this information can be accessed by the "legal" heirs of someone who has passed on.
This article is about the parents of a 21 year old man who committed suiside and Facebook and Google are fighting (citing privacy and scam attempts) letting the parents access his on-line accounts (which might provide a clue to why he killed himself).
http://rockcenter.msnbc.msn.com/_new...n-you-die?lite
I do like one of the commentors who said this:
and maybe someone who has military experience can explain this commentor
what are your thoughts on this subject??? should there be regulations governing the "disposial" of electronic legacies in the same manner that the physical stuff is handled.
now-a-days so much of the lives of people is spent/recorded on-line that this brings to light a new and quite different "trail" to be followed. as it stands today most younger person live their lives on-line and have loads of info "out in the cloud". so what happens when the people left behind want to access that information in the cloud.
right now it seems there is few legal decisions or president on how this information can be accessed by the "legal" heirs of someone who has passed on.
This article is about the parents of a 21 year old man who committed suiside and Facebook and Google are fighting (citing privacy and scam attempts) letting the parents access his on-line accounts (which might provide a clue to why he killed himself).
http://rockcenter.msnbc.msn.com/_new...n-you-die?lite
I do like one of the commentors who said this:
Facebook lacks privacy yet refuses to give grieving parents their son's password----kind of contradictory in practice don't you think.
funny how fb worries about the privacy of a dead users info to his family but will whore out everyones info to the highest paying companies,man fb is one bad pimp....................................
One of my dutiies in the Navy was to oversee the shipment of personal effects to the next of kin when someone on the ship died. We routinely removed and disposed of anything that could have been hurtful to the memory of their loved one. I imagine that someone like this young man who killed himself might have some activity which would do nothing but cause addtional pain for them.
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