I’m pleased to announce that my panel submission for SXSW interactive 2010 has passed the first stage and is open for voting in the PanelPicker. You’ll need sign in to SXSW or create an account to vote, but it only takes a moment.
Posts Mortem: Death and Digital Legacy
If you passed away today, how would your online friends find out? Should logins and passwords be in your will? Has technology changed mourning? Will your digital media stay online forever? Our lives are lived and documented online, it’s time to talk about the implications of death and digital legacy.
Some of the questions that the panel will seek to discuss are:
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- If you passed away, how would your online friends be notified?
- Should logins and passwords be included in your will?
- Would you want your digital presence to remain online forever?
- What the policies of the major social networks for profile access by the family of the deceased?
- What are the repercussions of the phenomenon of the suicide note as Facebook status?
- How has the Internet changed how people come together to mourn?
- Will pre-programmed updates from friends who have passed give them digital immortality?
- How have recent celebrity deaths brought digital mourning to the mainstream?
- If digital profiles truly have inherent value and equity, can they be bequeathed?
- What societal shifts will be required to handle ownership of our online footprints?
In the coming weeks I’ll be addressing some of these questions and seeking feedback. I want to know your personal experience and thoughts on these questions. Have I missed something that you’d like to see discussed? Then, please let me know in the comments.
My thanks to the ever-clever Ike Pigott for coining “posts mortem” and allowing me to use it in my title. My thanks also to all of those who’ve had conversations with me about different aspects of this topic. Your perspectives enrich the discussion.
Panel voting ends on September 4th. I appreciate your support and thank you for your vote.
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Some of my colleagues at Technically Women have also submitted panels to SXSW Interactive, outlined in today’s post. Please consider voting for theirs as well:
Maggie Fox
Scaling Social Media: Getting Credible Content to Mass Audiences
News 2.0 – How Old Media Companies Are Inventing New Models
Rachel Happe
Building Social Strategies at Fortune 100 Companies
Jennifer Leggio
Inherent Dangers of Real-Time Social Networking
How (Not) to Get Banned on Social Networks!
Shireen Mitchell
Is There A Technological Fix for Human Behavior?
Social Media Women of Color
And I’m certain that many more of my colleagues and friends on Twitter are on the SXSW PanelPicker. Please feel free to add your session link in the comments.
I am an early adopter of social media and a technology enthusiast. I've been a social media and strategic marketing consultant since 2007 and have over 20 years marketing experience. I am based in Montreal.




5 responses so far ↓
1 Alphonse Ha // Aug 18, 2009 at 8:26 am
Very interesting angle to SM and not discussed enough. Good Luck Adele!
2 Adele McAlear // Aug 18, 2009 at 10:55 am
Thanks Alphonse!
3 Dermot McGuire // Sep 3, 2009 at 2:36 am
Umm, wow, I’d actually really like to see this panel happen (too bad the chances of me making it from Sydney are, shall we say, slim?).
It’s something that I think about occassionally, and something that has had a little written about it already, but not (so far as I know) a indepth discussion. We’re originally experiencing dissonances as people’s virtual lives and selves and data and privacy are shifted out of alignment with their real world lives (as relationships break up, as jobs are changed etc) what then when we die? do we bequeath logins and passwords? or do we entrust our will’s benefactors to wipe away our digital remains after our deaths, on our behalf?
4 fellowcreative (Carl Jeffrey) // Sep 3, 2009 at 6:25 pm
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5 #Deathbook - a Post (s Mortem of Social Media, Online Content and Digital Rights Management | Fellow Creative) // Sep 4, 2009 at 2:14 pm
[...] ‘Posts Mortem’ - aims to address some of the larger, wider and as yet un solved issues of the in…. Proposed by Adele McAlear [...]
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