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Data Storage Encryption Security

Your Data and Cyber Business After You're Gone 290

Reader Mountain Splash writes "The New York Times has a decent thought-inspiring article questioning what happens to our stored data and who owns the rights to it after we die. I have to admit that, while this dilemma had already crossed my mind many months ago, I've been rather slow to do something about handling it. While considering the same, though, what I did do was start a very detailed list of my many various emailboxes, IM monikers, cyber buddies, and yes, passwords (complete with encrypted hints to be stored separately). I have also already approached my roomie and my sister about following up with that list for me as a last wish if and when the inevitable should occur. Just wondering if everyone else has done the same or similar... Anyone gone so far as to have already filed their information along with their will with their family lawyer?"
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Your Data and Cyber Business After You're Gone

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  • well.. (Score:3, Interesting)

    by mastergoon ( 648848 ) on Thursday June 03, 2004 @11:49AM (#9326340) Homepage
    I don't really care enough about what happens to my e-mail after I die to bother with all that crap. I don't really think anybody really is going to need my encrypted data after I died, or they would have had a key while I was alive.
  • Dupe? (Score:5, Informative)

    by Anonymous Coward on Thursday June 03, 2004 @11:49AM (#9326344)
    Yeah, I think so [slashdot.org]. 599 comments on the subject. Let's just all refer to that, shall we?
  • Also seen (Score:3, Informative)

    by L-s-L69 ( 700599 ) on Thursday June 03, 2004 @11:50AM (#9326349)
    HERE [slashdot.org]
  • Gloomy (Score:5, Insightful)

    by not_a_product_id ( 604278 ) on Thursday June 03, 2004 @11:51AM (#9326379) Journal
    I have also already approached my roomie and my sister about following up with that list for me as a last wish
    Rather gloomy but it did get me thinking about all the friends I only communicate with via email. If I look the wrong way crossing the road I'll just vanish from their sight.
    • Re:Gloomy (Score:5, Funny)

      by Bradee-oh! ( 459922 ) on Thursday June 03, 2004 @11:55AM (#9326431)
      If I look the wrong way crossing the road I'll just vanish from their sight.

      You only look ONE way when crossing the road?
    • Stop with the morbid thoughts god damn it! Enjoy life while it lasts, it's too short to be worrying about what's going to happen to your email addresses when you die! When you die, you won't give a shit. Simple. Live with that fact (applied liberally to many other areas of life) and you'll live a longer, less worrisome life! :-D

      Daniel
    • Re:Gloomy (Score:5, Funny)

      by bigman2003 ( 671309 ) on Thursday June 03, 2004 @12:04PM (#9326573) Homepage
      Oh no- all of the people on my Xbox Live friends list will have to do without me. Maybe I should wear a heart-beat monitor for realsies so my Rainbow Six 3 clan knows when I kick the bucket.

      "Dude...Noodle must just be taking a crap, he's been AFK for 3 rounds"

      "No man, I just checked. He is REALLY dead. Too bad he's hosting this server, otherwise I'd just kick him right now."

      "Hey- call his wife, and have her change this to a dedicated server...we could use this forever!"
    • Hmmm...

      I hereby patent a mechanism for informing people through electronic network means of a common acquaintance's state of deceasedness.

      I'll call it... www.e-obit.com

      Aw bloody. Taken :/
  • by mkro ( 644055 ) on Thursday June 03, 2004 @11:52AM (#9326388)
    Not really related to stored data and passwords, but a friend of mine has a deal with his sister, that if he unexpectedly dies, she will clean all porn out of his apartment and get rid of it so the rest of the family will never know.
    • There's a line in Coupling [amazon.com] about this when Geoff informs Steve's girlfriend that him and Steve are "porn buddies".
    • by MooseByte ( 751829 ) on Thursday June 03, 2004 @12:23PM (#9326800)

      Saturday Night Live had a skit commercial on that years ago, featuring Will Farrell I believe. It was an insurance service that, upon your death, would swoop into your home and remove any and all "embarrassing" artifacts before your relatives arrived.

      They showed the crew hauling out bongs, rather large marital aids, probably an inflatable goat or two from Farrell's apartment. Then a full cleanup to show that, even in death, you were a "good clean boy".

      Actually this sounds like a rather lucrative business potential.... :-)
    • Re:A bit off topic (Score:4, Interesting)

      by genesplicer ( 314591 ) <sbuttarsNO@SPAMgmail.com> on Thursday June 03, 2004 @12:52PM (#9327128)
      I have the same arrangement with an old roommate of mine - we both keep our pr0n in a specific directory of the same name and location. In the unfortunate event that one of us passes away, the other is to delete that directory before family members get ahold of the computer (or, more likely, make a backup copy for themselves, then delete :) ) ...
    • Re:A bit off topic (Score:4, Insightful)

      by Afty0r ( 263037 ) on Thursday June 03, 2004 @01:00PM (#9327204) Homepage
      Not really related to stored data and passwords, but a friend of mine has a deal with his sister, that if he unexpectedly dies, she will clean all porn out of his apartment and get rid of it so the rest of the family will never know.

      I notice this is moderated funny, but this is actually BANG ON. My housemate died suddenly earlier this year, and his family came for all his things a while later... in the meantime I cleaned all the porn off his desktop and laptop (had to break in as he was running passworded Windows XP) as I knew he had some.... alternative.... tastes that his very Catholic family would not like.
      I completely forgot about the approx. 20 CDs that were in his CD wallets alongside loads of feature films - and the family got them.
      Luckily the stuff on CDs was really the tamer kind of thing... only a little anecdote, but goes to show how close to the bone the parent comment is.
    • Re:A bit off topic (Score:4, Interesting)

      by dr_dank ( 472072 ) on Thursday June 03, 2004 @01:07PM (#9327265) Homepage Journal
      I'm told this is customary in the military. If someone is killed, his army buddy or CO will clear out the pics with thai prostitutes and other offending items from their personal effects so their memory won't be tarnished.
    • Re:A bit off topic (Score:3, Interesting)

      by casuist99 ( 263701 )
      I saw a program for just this purpose posted on slashdot a while back. It was called Dead Man's Switch [arsware.org] if I recall. If you use it or some similar piece of software you'd be pretty protected.
      Basically, it will encrypt (and I think delete if you want) any files on your computer that you don't want to exist after your death. It's a timer you re-set every week or so. Seems like a good idea - not just for people who don't want porn to stay on their computer, but also if you had anything sensitive on your com
  • by surfinbox ( 602851 ) on Thursday June 03, 2004 @11:52AM (#9326390) Homepage Journal
    For business related death I have prepared extensive documentation on servers, passwords, accounts, banking relationships, etc. and have filed that in my bank lock-box. I have informed my attorney whom I wish to have handle those affairs in my absence (a trusted friend/partner). The attorney has that on record in my will. The asset disposal itself is a normal course of handling the estate, but telling Amazon, PayPal, Authorize.net, and others who have my finanicals to shut off my account is no small effort. Finding the trusted friend is not trivial either.
  • by Prince Vegeta SSJ4 ( 718736 ) on Thursday June 03, 2004 @11:52AM (#9326391)
    is stored on a 40GB CF card, which stays around my neck, when I am creamated - it goes with me. All of the backups are on offbrand DVD-R's so they will be unreadable after 6 months anyway
  • by beeplet ( 735701 ) <beeplet@gmail.com> on Thursday June 03, 2004 @11:52AM (#9326395) Journal
    While terminally ill, Mr. Cochran, a programmer, left a full list of passwords for his work files with his employer, Mr. Purnell said. But he failed to do the same thing with the personal files, so they are now inaccessible.

    Maybe he didn't want anyone reading his personal files? That seems like the most obvious explanation to me.

    I think that as a culture, we need to learn how to let go of things. In the past, information was more ephemeral; books would decay or be lost over time. Just because we have the capacity virtually eternal data storage doesn't mean we should.

    In a way, I think holding on to every minute detail of someone's life devalues the things of importance they left behind. Do you think they really want to be remembered by their tax returns? Would they have wanted their grandchildren to inherit their file of meeting notes? If someone wants to leave important digital information to posterity, they should put that intent in their will, and (*gasp*) maybe even make a hard copy of it.

    Obviously if someone dies suddenly, that may not be an option. But my point is that we, the survivors, need to relearn how to distinguish between valuable data and stuff better left forgotten.
    • We may not need every minute detail from someone's files, but the family or associates might want stuff like family pictures, scientific research, family tree data... stuff like that. I don't hold on to everything, but I'm hoping taht people will look at my photo work (semiPro) in the future... but hopefully this won't be an issue for me for several score of years to come.
    • Maybe he didn't want anyone reading his personal files? That seems like the most obvious explanation to me.

      Or he died unexpectedly, and had made clear at many points that the information on his computer was extremely important to him. You'd honor your brother or uncles wish, right? Same thing here. Code he's worked on, things he valued, information he wanted kept 'alive', as it were.

      Someone else mentioned that I could just take the HDD out and put it in another box to recover the files. I could do that

    • In a way, I think holding on to every minute detail of someone's life devalues the things of importance they left behind. Do you think they really want to be remembered by their tax returns? Would they have wanted their grandchildren to inherit their file of meeting notes? If someone wants to leave important digital information to posterity, they should put that intent in their will, and (*gasp*) maybe even make a hard copy of it.
      Perhaps your family won't be interested, but historians might.
      Tax forms c
    • Let me give you an alternative pov. As a historian, it is precisely these things that you devalue that others value. For instance only recently I was researching an incident during th 1856 presidential election, and a university professor in the South (specifics aren't terribly important for my point). This professor left a copy of all his letters, and they were quite extensive to Duke University library upon his death--these letters are personal, to his sisters, wife, children, etc. And they offer an incre

  • by Gannoc ( 210256 ) on Thursday June 03, 2004 @11:52AM (#9326404)
    (complete with encrypted hints to be stored separately)

    "Wait, i'll read it out loud!"

    "TO UNCOVER ALL MY PASSWORDS LOVE,
    LOOK UP INTO THE STARS ABOVE!
    THE CHEERING CROWDS GAZE WITH FUN
    FROM LOCATION THIRTY ONE!"

    "Stars above? What does it mean!"

    "I've got it! To the Planetarium! The next clue must be under seat thirty one!"

    "Man, i'm so glad Bill died. I'm having the time of my life!"

    • Kind of like putting one's will in a Geocache?
    • by Tackhead ( 54550 ) on Thursday June 03, 2004 @12:18PM (#9326741)
      > "TO UNCOVER ALL MY PASSWORDS LOVE,
      > LOOK UP INTO THE STARS ABOVE!
      > THE CHEERING CROWDS GAZE WITH FUN
      > FROM LOCATION THIRTY ONE!"
      >
      > "Stars above? What does it mean!"
      >
      > "I've got it! To the Planetarium! The next clue must be under seat thirty one!"
      >
      > "Man, i'm so glad Bill died. I'm having the time of my life!"

      Problem is, if someone's closed the planetarium or just changed the seating arrangements in the past decade, the game breaks down.

      Except for one thing: In the decades of evolution after the extinction of that particular movie genre, we've developed:

      1) "Shared-secret" cryptosystems. You don't need all of the key. And even if your clues are chained together, you can make up strings of clues that intersect. (If the Planetarium Clue leads you to the Zoo Clue, you can still find the Zoo Clue if a third Clue also points people to the Zoo.)

      2) Geocaching.

      3) Widely-known and widely-distributed images that can never be truly "erased" from history, unlike the clue buried under the planetarium.

      4) If your estate isn't worth several million dollars, nobody's gonna bother flying halfway across the country for each clue. But by using #3 and only a little bit of geocaching, a little Perl scripting might be worth doing.

      BRIM'S EXCLUSIVE QUAKER OATS,
      NATALIE PORTMAN POURS SOME GOATS!
      IN SOVIET RUSSIA, CYCLES YOU,
      ALL YOUR BASE ARE THIRTY-TWO!

      "OMFG, if we XOR the ASCII for 'wilfrid', as in the Quaker Oats guy 'Wilfrid Brimley', and we XOR it with 'hotgrit', and XOR *that* with the Goatse Guy's picture, all we need to do is take a CRC-32 of the resulting file and we have the next four bytes of the key! w00t!"

      Man, I so have to update my will.

    • Or you could always GeoCache [geocaching.com] it.
  • by The I Shing ( 700142 ) * on Thursday June 03, 2004 @11:53AM (#9326411) Journal
    Last year I gave my supervisor a sealed, labeled envelope containing the various usernames and passwords I use, and the various ways that I change them from time to time, just in case something happens to me.

    When I first gave it to her, she immediately ripped it open, not fully comprehending what it was. I had to snatch it out of her hands, exclaiming, "I'm not dead yet!" I sealed it into another envelope and she put it in her drawer, where it has remained untouched to this day (I assume).
    • by doublem ( 118724 ) on Thursday June 03, 2004 @12:11PM (#9326650) Homepage Journal
      We have what's called the "Hit by a bus" file where I work. It's supposed to be a set of sealed envelopes to be opened in the event of an emergency.

      Sadly, we had a server die while the Network Admin was on vacation, and we discovered his was blank. Seems he wants to take all our configuration, login and server data to his grave.

      And it STILL hasn't been updated
      • by MooseByte ( 751829 ) on Thursday June 03, 2004 @01:12PM (#9327316)

        "We have what's called the "Hit by a bus" file where I work. It's supposed to be a set of sealed envelopes to be opened in the event of an emergency."

        We have those too, only they're called "internal documentation" and stored in a readily reviewable format in a controlled setting.

        "Sadly, we had a server die while the Network Admin was on vacation, and we discovered his was blank. Seems he wants to take all our configuration, login and server data to his grave."

        Dude, if your freakin' network config map and other critical info is supposed to be placed in a sealed envelope WITHOUT review, and stuck in a mayonaisse jar like some Amazing Kreskin skit, I'd run far and fast from your employer.

        Yep boss, I've got the whole project completed. It's all documented in this sealed manila envelope which you are NOT to open until my death. So, about my bonus review...

    • by account_deleted ( 4530225 ) on Thursday June 03, 2004 @12:13PM (#9326688)
      Comment removed based on user account deletion
    • >where it has remained untouched to this day

      Hi, I'm the janitor that works second shift at your company. I looked in that envelope after your manager left it on top of her desk in her unlocked office, and now not only do I have access to everything in the enterprise that you do, but I also have your hints for future password permutations!

      THANKS, IDIOT SYSADMIN!

      You should have password recovery policies and procedures for anything important, so you dont have to do something retarded like writing do

  • Company Policy (Score:2, Interesting)

    by verBirk ( 607045 )
    This is something that I maintain through my company as a matter of policy. The company maintains life insurance for me and also an electronic access store to be certain that company information is always accessible in an emergency. The convenient side-effect is that my personal information is also protected in this way. And yes, I do trust this information to the company and we do have policies covering assurety of this information being purged by the lawyers when we get sacked, etc. This works in the
  • It is immortalized in duped articles [slashdot.org] on /.
  • The reality is... (Score:4, Insightful)

    by eclectic_echidna ( 586735 ) on Thursday June 03, 2004 @11:54AM (#9326419)
    The reality is...

    Nobody cares about your data. They just want your money, which is easy enough to find.

    After reading through GiBs of your old mail, they will see that you have a secret swiss bank account with some cash????

    Yeah sure...

    Don't overestimate your importance in this world.

    --
    ee
    • by Atzanteol ( 99067 )
      Ouch. Perhaps you shouldn't underestimate your importance either? Friends and family tend to like you for more than your money. Well, maybe not *you*, but most of us probably have people who truly care for us.
  • Old Movie websites (Score:5, Interesting)

    by dilweed ( 698689 ) on Thursday June 03, 2004 @11:55AM (#9326436) Homepage
    Ever visited a website for a movie that had been released 3 or 4 years ago? The sites just sit there on a server somwhere, ignored largely.

    I had a friend commit suicide rather suddenly a few years ago. His site is still up at AOL. I can still read messages he posted and see pictures of him here and there on the net. He left quite a digital legacy.

    It's truely intersting, the things we leave behind and we don't realize it.
  • How much of the info stored under your various accounts is actually important if you are dead?
    if you are running a business, it is generally a good idea to run it the way you can walk away on a moment notice: pass it to someone or put it up for sale. You should already have it planned and documented.
    If you do not have a business and we are talking about random ideas and some IP (code) developed over years - how much of it is actually useful to other people? Unless you are one of those big thinkers with un
    • How much of the info stored under your various accounts is actually important if you are dead?

      The data that you consider irrelevant may be extremely valuable to someone else. For example, that senior year class photograph your sister sent you from college 20 years ago, may be of little use to you, but to a complete stranger, that might be the last remaining photograph of their mother when she was young.

      We encountered this situation in our family. I was telling my mother about the various reunion web
  • by Anonymous Coward
    I mean, I'm going to be quite dead.
  • I have information about all of my various electronic assets and how they should be handled in my will, which has a copy on my computer, a hard copy in my desk, and a hard copy in a safe deposit box. I don't have a whole lot to distribute, except for my life insurance payout, but I have various instructions on where some of my stuff should go, who gets certain books, etc. It's a fairly informal will, but I expect my family will respect my wishes on it, since there aren't multimillion dollar assets to figh
  • Not much changed... (Score:2, Interesting)

    by beatleadam ( 102396 )
    ...since the last time Slashdot covered this topic.

    But in my case, I can say that I have made some inroads in both the living world (insurance mods, finance mods, Living Will conversations and the like) and the after I am gone (in this body anyways) world. The largest step that I have taken in the after I am gone world is to comprehend that as of right this moment at least, I have NOTHING that anyone would really want or need to see as far as data or anything "electronic". Really, all I have done is set
  • I'm not that concernes about what happens to my data and emails after I die, not much interresting there. What I am thinking about is making a list of email addresses to the people that I'm only corresponding with by email and don't know any of my family/other friends and give to my sisters or something. I have some friends on the other side of the world and I think they should be notified if the inevitably should happen.
  • Who owns? (Score:3, Insightful)

    by abscondment ( 672321 ) on Thursday June 03, 2004 @11:59AM (#9326493) Homepage

    Once survivors gain access to the data, questions may also arise about who actually owns it. If a person saved a book manuscript on a hard drive and left the machine to a friend, for instance, the friend might try to claim ownership of the manuscript as well.

    Think about it this way:

    The computer is a container. It holds the information that is put into it; nothing more, nothing less. If I indicate that my bookshelves are going to my younger brother after my death, does that mean the books are too? If I bequeath him my dresser, does he get the clothes as well? I doubt it.

    Information property is tricky business. It takes up little (no) physical space, so it's easy to forget. Instead of simply erasing disks or automatically passing along whatever they contain, computers need to be emptied just like the rooms of a house would be. Then everything needs to be sorted through--it doesn't all automatically go to whoever gets the house.

    • Anything you own but forget to mention in your will becomes a matter for the probate court. For most people, their information assets are thought of as worthless so nobody bothers to fight over them, but everything does have to be accounted for somehow or the probate case isn't really over with.
    • Then everything needs to be sorted through--it doesn't all automatically go to whoever gets the house.

      Ah but digital IP can be copied. If you own the rights, you could leave a copy to everyone.

      Please someone donate your SO's naked pics to the world! try alt.binaries.pictures.dead.so
  • I don't care about any of the administrivia of my life but I do appreciate reducing it for others.

    I might consider a bequest to a useful OS tool. Being immortalized in a geek toy would be worth some money I'd be too dead to spend.

    ls
  • My plan... (Score:5, Funny)

    by hookedup ( 630460 ) on Thursday June 03, 2004 @12:00PM (#9326508)
    Everybody needs a porn buddy. Upon hearing about your death, said buddy goes to your house, ignores your wife, and proceeds to rip the harddrive out of your computer and leave.

    Tools not necessary..
  • I sure as hell dont.

    I mean, I'll be fucking dead. I wont give a crap about anything when I'm DEAD.

    Sure, it might be a selfish thing to say. But its the truth. :)

    I don't care what happens with my stuff after I'm dead. I'LL BE DEAD.
  • Bus theory (Score:2, Interesting)

    by belgar ( 254293 )
    That's what we call it in our office.

    "If I step off the curb tonight, and get hit by a bus, will anyone know what the hell to do with this?" If the answer is "Fuck, no!" then the aformentioned-ill-fated-coworker needs to write it down.
  • http://ask.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=04/05/03/20 37245&mode=thread&tid=126&tid=95

    Already covered, basically a dupe. I believe this story has risen from the grave.

    This leads to the conclusion that eventually, all your data will be reborn in another life and continue on. There's no need to worry what will happen to it.

  • Comment removed (Score:3, Insightful)

    by account_deleted ( 4530225 ) on Thursday June 03, 2004 @12:07PM (#9326608)
    Comment removed based on user account deletion
  • by op00to ( 219949 ) on Thursday June 03, 2004 @12:10PM (#9326636)
    I have also already approached my roomie and my sister about following up with that list for me as a last wish if and when the inevitable should occur.

    Buddy, believe me when I tell you this, it's not an if question, it's definately a when question.
  • by Lispy ( 136512 ) on Thursday June 03, 2004 @12:12PM (#9326673) Homepage
    according to yesterdays news [slashdot.org]. ;-)
  • live on (Score:3, Funny)

    by ForsakenRegex ( 312284 ) on Thursday June 03, 2004 @12:17PM (#9326725) Homepage
    I think I'd rather put plans into place to hide my death. Then I want my lawyer to keep track of how long it takes any of my "friends" to actually notice I'm gone. At a later date, he will get them all together (if they will even come) and berate them all with the information. My will shall award him a bonus for each person brought to tears. Then he is to kick them all out empty handed while laughing at them maniacally . He will then award everything to some reasonably intelligent (yet to be defined) low-income person who deserves (also yet to be defined) a break. He can then assume my online identity where it may benefit him as he so chooses.

    More likely, it will all go to the government because I'll put off creating a will until I'm already dead.
  • I have explicitely stated in my will that all intellectual property work that I have created which has not been assigned by me to another party (ie any employers who have rights to the work) shall immediatelly be released under an open source license and the ownership of the copyright shall be transfered to the FSF for them to do as they choose.

    I have told my relatives about my wishes and the location of my data. I have put passwords in escrow with a close friend.

  • rm -rf /
  • by teamhasnoi ( 554944 ) <teamhasnoi AT yahoo DOT com> on Thursday June 03, 2004 @12:20PM (#9326773) Journal
    but who's dead on Slashdot? Anyone know someone who posted to /. and is now dead?

    I myself have 2030+ posts here, and boiled down, it shows that I was funny, a musician, and angry at how those in power treat those who aren't.

    I guess that is about what people will say about me when I'm gone (plus the unavoidable references to my incredible sexual prowess, my stunning good looks, and my amazing plan to save the world with cold fusion).

    So, then. Dead people's /. posts?

  • Hmm, what happens if you write the "Great American Novel" and die before publication? You forgot to put it into your will. It is Intellectual Property, and would be divied up as your jurisdiction decrees.

    Same goes for your emails and any other electronic IP. With all the griping about 200 year copyrights (well, only life of author plus 90), you'd think you'd be happy to know your spouse/child would have rights to your email until 2094.

    If you're putting together a will, just tell the attorney that you want
  • by Saeed al-Sahaf ( 665390 ) on Thursday June 03, 2004 @12:23PM (#9326803) Homepage
    ...is belonging to you.
  • by Prince Vegeta SSJ4 ( 718736 ) on Thursday June 03, 2004 @12:24PM (#9326817)
    I have separated my data into four separted *.rar files.
    • Britney.Porn.secret.rar
    • all.software.adobe.crack.windows.rar
    • american.idol.secret.pics.rar
    • lord.rings.unreleased.fourth-book.rar

      Posted them on Kazaa, DC++, Emule, Limewire, Edonkey, Shareaze, Xolox, WinMX. Along with a picture of myself. WE WILL LIVE FOREVER!!!!!

  • by Futurepower(R) ( 558542 ) on Thursday June 03, 2004 @12:24PM (#9326819) Homepage

    I made a password list for a customer, that, over time, has grown to 3,849 words. (There is a lot of explanation about how accounts are configured.)

    I encrypted that list with an unguessable password that includes punctuation and numbers, using the excellent GnuPG [gnupg.org].

    I sent the encrypted file by email to every responsible person who works for the customer, including the CEO. I demanded that everyone learn the master password, because otherwise, if something happened to me, they would have problems with their accounts and web site. I also copied the file to their hard drives.

    Although I have made several demands in strong language, no one, NO ONE, has bothered to get the master password from me, even though I have suggested it in person to several people several times. So, they have the file, but have no access to it.

    The fact is, the new world of computing (okay, not new to me or you) requires a huge cultural change, and the average person has mostly not gone very far in making that change.
    • by Idarubicin ( 579475 ) on Thursday June 03, 2004 @01:26PM (#9327456) Journal
      Although I have made several demands in strong language, no one, NO ONE, has bothered to get the master password from me, even though I have suggested it in person to several people several times. So, they have the file, but have no access to it.

      Or you could write out the password and put it into a safe deposit box at the bank. Leave the key with your attorney, and instructions in your will. Better yet, give the entire password list to the company attorney.

      Damn right nobody at the company wants to have access to all your passwords. What if you snap and decide to commit some act of information sabotage? Now you've got plausible deniability--'It only happened after I oh-so-responsibly (*ahem*) gave my passwords to senior management.'

      Further, what happens if any of those senior officials leaves the company before you die? Now you've got to create a new password file and master password that they all have to rememorize--or the officer who left gets to sell all your secrets to the company's chief competitor.

      Sometimes the most technical solution isn't the best.

  • There are many different digital music resellers that are poping up these days. With DRM comming, one must ask if the music they buy could be passed to their descendants upon their death. For me, this is an issue. I hate the idea of spending $2000 on music throughout my life and not being able to pass it down to generations.
  • by wcrowe ( 94389 ) on Thursday June 03, 2004 @12:26PM (#9326841)
    I thought about this years ago. I don't really have any important information to impart to my loved ones, but I'm sure it would be helpful for them if they were to know passwords to the home router/firewall, webspace, etc.

    Directions to this information are in my safety deposit box at the bank, along with our wills, etc.

    Some may laugh, but consider: Why leave hassles with your family (especially technically ignorant ones, like mine)? If they have easy access to these things then they can change or cancel services, modify settings, etc.

  • Living Trust (Score:3, Informative)

    by adius ( 613006 ) on Thursday June 03, 2004 @12:28PM (#9326860)
    For the easiest method of transferring ownership of anything digital or otherwise I use a "Living Trust". A safe is used to store my documents in typed or witten format (a good locksmith can crack it when needed) and a trusted friend to manage the trust. This way I can die in peace knowing that my loved ones will not be ripped off by the greedy probate process.
  • I think that the fortune cookie for this article sums up the issue of saving my data data rather nicely.
    Some parts of the past must be preserved, and some of the future prevented at all costs.
  • by beachplum ( 777797 ) on Thursday June 03, 2004 @12:33PM (#9326915) Homepage
    When my partner died, it was a nightmare to get all the dialup services cancelled, etc. etc. Anybody who has a credit card which is automatically billed, that billing goes on regardless - not that dead people have to worry about credit ratings, but it can cost your estate (read, your friends and family) a lot of time and money.

    Also, it is most offensive to have to send death certificates to total strangers, in order to document that the person you say is dead, really is dead, thereby enabling the company to cancel your whatever-it-is. Believe me, I went through this with dialups and credit card companies. It took months to finally get every branch of every company involved to accept that they were not getting any more money. I have never seen a dead person rack up so many late charges on a credit card. After the company was notified of the death. Go figure!

    It is so much better to be over-prepared than under-prepared. Somebody has to clean up the wreckage after you die, and it is much easier to gove that person the tools they need to do the job.

  • What happens when you die on Livejournal [livejournal.com].

    My wife told me about this -- one of our friends is on here. I don't really do lj (my life is chronicled on Usenet!) so I'm not up on the politics, but apparantly people have tried to get people removed from this list, or to have their journals removed after their death, and lj (or somebody else, I don't know) has been unwilling to do so.

  • Most of us probably don't care about this, only some of us do. I, for one, am fine with letting Yahoo, AOL, etc. cancel my inactive accounts. I also don't need anyone that isn't family or real life friends to know that I kicked the bucket. I don't have any l33t login names or a low ID number to pass on and even if I did, no one would want them. I don't have any secret files that can only be read after I'm dead.

    If you're the same as me (and you likely are), then don't be concerned.

  • I have also already approached my roomie and my sister about following up with that list for me as a last wish if and when the inevitable should occur.


    Haven't you read this article [slashdot.org]?
  • by swb ( 14022 ) on Thursday June 03, 2004 @12:40PM (#9326997)
    Isn't this just a new twist on an old problem -- poorly documented estates?

    My dad, for example, has three mortgaged investment properties in Arizona, a motorhome, a car, and a safety deposit box. That I know about. I have no idea what his bank accounts are, what other real estate he might own, what his liabilities are, or what other assets he might have.

    Your electronic data is just another element of the poorly documented estate, and probably the least important one, unless you're someone truly interesting and have various letters and correspondence someone else might care about.

    I dread dad dying unexpectedly. Not only will it be a personal loss, but it will be a huge PITA to get his estate sorted. Dad had a ton of problems when mom died, and she was his wife and he inhereted all of her stuff by default. At least I know enough to bee-line to the safety deposit box (for which I have a key) and to take out all the gold...
  • by maiden_taiwan ( 516943 ) * on Thursday June 03, 2004 @12:49PM (#9327096)
    Here's a convenient method to back up your GnuPG private key: Excerpt from O'Reilly's Linux Security Cookbook [safaribooksonline.com]

    This sort of thing is vital for decrypting your files after your death, or if you are injured and suffer amnesia, or other morbid scenarios in which your data outlives you.

  • StuntCopter (Score:3, Interesting)

    by 0x0d0a ( 568518 ) on Thursday June 03, 2004 @02:34PM (#9328196) Journal
    Some people may remember the Macintosh game StuntCopter. When the developer died, his parents released the software into the public domain:

    These arcade games were programmed by Duane Blehm. They have all been previously released and are currently offered by most sources of Public Domain software. Duane unexpectedly died a year ago. Cairo ShootOut and Puzz'l required users to send $3.00 to Duane to receive a "Key Code" to unlock all of the features of the program. All of Duane's games contained offers to sell the source code of the programs to programmers who wanted to see how Duane wrote them. Duane's parents have been swamped with Key Code and source code requests that they are unable to supply. These new versions have been altered at the request of Duane's parents. These versions have been unlocked and will allow full access to all of the features. The offers for source code have also been removed. Duane's parents have requested that if you have any of the old versions of Duane's games that you destroy them and replace them with the new versions. Please do not distribute any of the prior versions. Distribution of these new versions is encouraged and requested. Thank You and Have Fun!

Top Ten Things Overheard At The ANSI C Draft Committee Meetings: (3) Ha, ha, I can't believe they're actually going to adopt this sucker.

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