Wednesday 4 November 2009

Digital floorboards

My friend Simon likes to say that no one’s internet history bears close inspection. He’s speaking for himself, mostly; he’s always flirted more dangerously with depravity than me. My history is saturated with death. Of its concomitant, sex, not a jot. Yes. How boring.

It has not always been so. When my ex-wife got inside my computer she discovered correspondence which expedited the divorce. I was shocked by the invasion and delighted with the outcome.

But that’s another story.

What happens if you drop dead in, say, the next five minutes? Or tonight? Or even, to help you get used to the idea, tomorrow morning at 11.43? What happens to all your cyberstuff?

There are two sides to this. First, while your grievers are buoying themselves up by bravely singing along with Celine - "Near, far, wherever you are / I believe that the heart does go on" - it won't be just your heart. So too will your email account, Facebook page and other digital testimony of your extantcy. You’ll want them to be able to stop the banter, spare themselves, terminate you.

Second, you’ll want them to be able to access accounts, either to close them or get their hands on the money and the digital media and whatever else you've got out there of monetary or sentimental value stored in a cloud server somewhere.

They won’t be able to do either unless they know, 1) what to look for, and 2) what the passwords are.

I remember sitting with a newly widowed widow who couldn’t begin to start winding up her husband’s affairs because she could even get into his computer. The password for that, together with all the others inside, died with him. Heaven only knows what she did in the end. Did she ever discover where all his funds were? I don't know that she did.

There may be some passwords you want to die with you—even if you can’t be prosecuted posthumously. But there are others which you will want to be available. Where can you keep them where no one can find them until the undertaker’s men come to zip you up in a bag and clonk you downstairs?

Awareness of all this is growing—as it needs to. And the answer is arriving—you guessed it—online. Of all the solution providers out there, the one I like best is offered by Deathswitch. Once you’ve stored all your secrets with them they prod you at intervals decided by you: they send you an email to which you must reply. If you don’t, they e-poke you a couple of times. If you still show no signs of life they decide you are definitely dead and contact those people you have designated with messages you composed while still alive.

Google Deathswitch and you’ll find lots of stuff about what they, and others like them, do. There’s a piece in the Guardian here. And the Telegraph here.

They all draw attention to the two major drawbacks of putting all your eggs in one cyberbasket. First, what if the website dies first? Second, what if it gets hacked?

Progress is a wonderful thing. But let’s hear it for floorboards. Even after all these years, hard to beat.

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4 Comments:

Anonymous Anonymous said...

Lovin' your floorboards.

Or elsewhere in the home: just read a moving passage in an intriguing novel called The Book Thief [narrator: Death] in which a very precious document was stitched into a mattress for safe-keeping.

KE

4 November 2009 at 22:57  
Anonymous Thomas Friese said...

Charles, I am impressed! I was about to send you a note about Deathswitch, which I read about in the local Viennese paper yesterday - along with Legacy Locker. I knew you'd have something to say - and now that I visit again, I see that you already have.

My own impression about these service? Clever, very practical, a timely development of the old Last Will and Testament. (All assuming as you say it doesn't die first or get hacked, in which latter case you might as well die, having exposed all your most intimate treasures and secrets.)

But the benefits stop there. This is a purely mundane "bridging mortality", as their slogan goes - nothing more. It deals with the practical consequences of dying in an online world, but changes nothing about the plain terror and hopelessness of real physical death.

Sure, you can prepare a heartfelt message (or a very nasty last-word-in-the-argument) for loved ones - but these will be merely replayed versions of something from "this side". But you will then be as cold, lifeless and non-existent as your unplugged and recycled computer.

Or will you? This for me is the real question - and not being able to delude oneself and others by some clever technical solution that one lives on.

Nevertheless, this service could also function as a new kind of "momento mori" for the technological world - if it opens just a few eyes to the inevitability of death, it is a good thing.

Thomas
http://perpetuasgarden.org

6 November 2009 at 11:23  
Blogger Rupert Callender said...

Several months after Tim Leary died his friend Robert Anton Wilson got an email from him saying "Robert, how is everything? Greetings from the other side....it's not what I expected. Nice, but crowded...Hope you're well. Love Timothy."

7 November 2009 at 17:32  
Anonymous Jonathan said...

Thanks for that, Rupert...next time I forget my PIN number,I'll know who to contact!

7 November 2009 at 21:31  

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