Managing your Facebook will account after you die
FACEBOOK has announced that it will grant users more control over what happens to their Facebook pages after they die. Starting Thursday, users should see a new option pop up in their security settings that will let them choose whether they want to pass their information and account management over to someone else when the time comes.
Thisisnotsomethingthatpeople like to talk about. But the truth is that what happens to your data after death is as big a question now as what happens to your physical property.
Just think of all the information you store online, or communicate in e-mail. Google already offers a similar tool to let you decide what to do with the trove of e-mail and other data it has on its users. Yahoo Japan has a full-fledged service to let people know about your death and handle all of your data management.
Facebook is different. The site was originally designed for college students by a college student. It’s probably safe to say that handling the profiles of the dead wasn’t a consideration Facebook chief executive Mark Zuckerberg gave much thought to. So Facebook has had to evolve a response over time — Facebook pages are often a place where friends and family congregatetogrieve.Thecompany already offers the option for people to report the death of a Facebook user, which “memorialises” the account and basically freezes it. You can’t change anything posted, change the audience for any postings or even log in to the account.
But that wasn’t enough for a lot of Facebook users, said Vanessa Callison-Burch, a Facebook product manager. “There were a lot of asks about features we could add,” she said. “People wanted the ability to respond to new friend requests, and do more with the account going forward.” — WPBloomberg