Most
people hope to go to heaven when they die, but they don't want all of
their online information floating around in the cloud with them. Now
Google has a solution for data after death.
The internet
giant has come up with a "digital will" that allows consumers to decide
what should be done with their data when they have passed to the other
side or if they plan to be out of Wi-Fi range for a long period.
Officially
called the "Inactive Account Manager", the new feature allows holders
of Google accounts to "tell Google what you want done with your digital
assets when you die or can no longer use your account", the internet
giant said.
Users can ask Google to delete their data
after a long period of inactivity, can have their favorite cat videos
on YouTube sent to the recipient of their choice after their passing, or
have their family snaps sent to a favourite sibling.
The
new Google feature is a sign of an increasingly digitized world in which
people place as much value on their virtual possessions as they do on
their more traditional physical ones, said Allison Druin, chief futurist
at the University of Maryland.
"It used to be that we had
scrapbooks or houses and passed them on after we died, but the more we
value our digital archive, the more we want to pass it on and make sure
it lives on after us that the digital footprint we leave behind says who
we are," Druin told RIA Novosti.
"Because we value the virtual world as much as the physical world, we have to do this," she said.
Google is not the first company to provide consumers with data solutions for the afterlife.
Deathswitch
sends out passwords, bank account information, final wishes,
"unspeakable secrets", love notes, even the last word in an argument to
recipients specified by account holders when certain triggers are met.
"When
you do not enter your password for some period of time, the system
prompts you again several times. With no reply, the computer deduces you
are dead or critically disabled and your pre-scripted messages are
automatically emailed to those named by you," Deathswitch says on its
website.
Legacy Locker bills itself as "a safe, secure
repository for your vital digital property that lets you grant access to
online assets for friends and loved ones in the event of loss, death or
disability".
Google's Inactive Account Manager - which
some in the blogosphere have dubbed "data-after-death" - can be
activated in Google users' account settings.
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