What happens to your Google account after you die? With a new tool called Inactive Account Manager, you can now decide for yourself.
Inactive Account Manager allows you to set up steps for Google to
take if you haven't accessed your account for a while (However, death
isn't the only case where you might use this tool. Illness or
disinterest also could be involved ).
Trusted contacts can access and download your data on various Google
services, such as Gmail and YouTube, and an auto-responder can tell
people that your account is inactive. You can also delete your account
entirely.
This account manager kicks in after an inactivity period of your choosing--three months minimum, one year maximum.
One month before this timeout period begins, you'll get a warning via text message.
Although Inactive Account Manager is euphemistically named, Google is quite clear about its purposein a blog post.
“We hope that this new feature will enable you to plan your digital
afterlife—in a way that protects your privacy and security—and make life
easier for your loved ones after you’re gone,” Product Manager Andreas
Tuerk wrote.
Setup is fairly simple—but definitely creepy—with a step-by-step
process for setting up trusted contacts and a Gmail auto-response. Once
it's all set up, you can leave Inactive Account Manager disabled if
you're not ready to set the plans in place.
However, the option to delete your account is too confusing as it
stands. Google says it can wipe out all your data “once all requested
actions have been completed,” but it's unclear what this means.
How long do trusted contacts have to download your data? What if a
trusted contact downloads some data, but not all of it? Can trusted
contacts handle the deletion process themselves? It's all a bit vague,
which is a problem since you won't be around to deal with any issues
that come up.
Still, this is a useful tool compared to the Google alternative,
which involves having a loved one send Google a copy your death
certificate, among other documents, and waiting for months to see if
Google will comply.
It's also one of the first attempts by a major tech company to automate the data-sharing process in the event of death.
Facebook has as “Memorialization Request” form that can turn a deceased person's page into a place for remembrance, and Microsoft has a “Next of Kin Process” that results in a mailed DVD of data. Twitter can deactivate a deceased user's account, but will not provide access.
Google's solution puts you in control and lets you decide what data to release, and to whom.
Meanwhile, third-party services like If I Die and DeadSoci.al
have gone the spookier route, allowing users to set up messages on
Facebook and Twitter, to be sent out posthumously. No such option exists
from Google
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