Google adds 'digital estate planning' to its services
1 APRIL 2013
AFP - Google on Thursday began letting people plan out
what is to be done with their digital photos, documents and other virtual
belongings after they die or become incapacitated.
An "Inactive Account Manager" can be used to
direct Google to pass on data from online venues such as Google Drive, Gmail,
YouTube, or social network Google+ to particular people or be deleted after
being dormant for too long.
"What should happen to your photos, emails and
documents when you stop using your account?" Google said in a message at
an account settings page.
"You might want your data to be shared with a
trusted friend or family member, or, you might want your account to be deleted
entirely," the message continued.
"Whatever the reason, we give you the option of
deciding what happens to your data."
Google lets people specify how long to wait before taking
action, and the California-based Internet giant will send account holders email
or text message reminders before "timeout" periods are ended.
The feature was added as people increasingly trust their
data and memories online social networks, data storage facilities, and other
services hosted in the Internet "cloud."
Facebook, for example, allows members to have accounts
"memorialized" after they die.
Laws in the United States and elsewhere are vague on the
fate of digital rights to online accounts after death, leading to complications
and legal wrangling for survivors who want access to the online services of the
deceased.
In one case that drew considerable attention, the family
of a US Marine killed in Iraq went to court in 2005 after being blocked from
getting access to his Yahoo email account, with the company arguing that it
could not release "private" information and that the account was
"non-transferable" under terms of service.
Some say a separate document or executor for digital
assets could be useful, with one way to preserve access being to register
accounts in the name of a trust, control of which could be transferred on
death.
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