Not everyone wants to leave this earth with their online accounts being managed by relatives and next-of-kin,
or just floating around on the Internet forever. If you're the kind of
person who likes your privacy -- even in death -- you should probably
make some plans to have all of your online and social media accounts
nuked when you pass away.
Some services, such as Google and
Facebook, let you set up your eventual account deletion before you get
anywhere close to death. Other services will keep your account forever
unless an immediate family member or the executor of your estate
requests it be removed. Here's how to make sure all your loose ends are
tied up, and that nobody ever gets hold of your top-secret/possibly
incriminating emails and Twitter direct messages.
Google's
Inactive Account Manager lets you choose what happens to your account
when it becomes inactive for a certain period of time. You can set up
the Inactive Account Manager to delete your Google account and all
products associated with that account, including Gmail, Blogger,
AdSense, and YouTube.
To set this up, log in to your Google account and go to this page.
You will need to provide Google with a phone number for alerts --
Google will send a message to this number before your account times out,
so you know your account is about to become inactive. You will then
need to select a timeout period (3 months, 6 months, 9 months, one year,
15 months, or 18 months).
Then, under Optionally delete account, turn on Delete my account. Click Enable to
turn the Inactive Account Manager on, and you're set. If you fail to
log in to your account for the timeout period you selected, Google will
delete your Google account and all data associated with it.
Facebook
is one of few online services that lets you set a legacy contact --
someone who can manage parts of your account and memorialize your page
-- for when you die. Facebook also lets you delete your account when you
die (though it doesn't use inactivity to determine that you've passed
away).
To make sure your Facebook account is deleted when you die, open Facebook and go to Settings > Security > Legacy Contact. Check the box next to Account Deletion.
You will see a pop-up box asking if you really want to delete your account in the future. Click Delete After Death
and then re-enter your Facebook password to save your changes. Your
account will now be deleted when Facebook is notified of your death --
this means that if anybody tries to memorialize your page, it will be
deleted instead of memorialized.
Use a digital legacy service
Google
and Facebook give you the power to delete your account when you die,
but many sites and services -- such as LinkedIn, Twitter, Microsoft, and
Yahoo -- do not. These sites will delete the account of a deceased
person at the request of an immediate family member or the executor of
an estate (by the way, you can and should delineate how you want your
digital life to be handled in your last will and testament). If you want
to take full control, you can use a digital legacy services like
Perpetu.
Perpetu
is an online service that covers Gmail, Facebook, Twitter, Dropbox,
Flickr, LinkedIn and GitHub. You connect your accounts to Perpetu, and
then you outline your final wishes for each service -- for example, you
can request that Perpetu delete certain emails from your Gmail account,
delete tweets and direct messages from Twitter, or delete files from
your Dropbox account.
The service can't really delete actual
accounts, but it can delete data and leave final updates for your
friends and family to see. Perpetu's service kicks in when the company
receives a report of your death from a trusted contact with your
reporting code, so it's still a good idea to put this in your will.
Source: Cnet
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