Fri, Mar 20, 2009 - Page 9 News List

Missing: Death leaves online lives in limbo

Web sites such as Deathswitch and Slightly Morbid have been helpful in alerting online social groups about a member’s passing

By Peter Svensson  /  AP , NEW YORK

He wasn’t dead: Three months later, he came back from his summer vacation, which he’d spent without Internet access. By then, the Potters had already had Slightlymorbid.com up and running for two weeks.

A third site with a similar concept plans to launch next month.

Legacy Locker will charge US$30 per year. It will require a copy of a death certificate before releasing information.

THE YOUNG

Peter Vogel in Tampa, Florida, was never able to reach all of his stepson Nathan’s online friends after the boy died last year at age 13 during an epileptic seizure.

A few years earlier, someone had hacked into one of the boy’s accounts, so Vogel, a computer administrator, taught Nathan to choose passwords that couldn’t be easily guessed. He also taught the boy not to write passwords down, so Nathan left no trail to follow.

Vogel himself has a trusted friend who knows all his important login information. As he points out, having access to a person’s e-mail account is the most important thing, because many Web site passwords can be retrieved through e-mail.

Vogel joked that he hoped the only reason his friend would be called on to use his access within “the next hundred years or so” would be if Vogel forgets his own passwords.

But, he said, “as Nathan has proven, anything can happen any time, even if you’re only 13.”

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