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What happens to your Online Identity ...

Chalanachithram.com DB » Archives » Archive through March 18, 2010 » What happens to your Online Identity once you die? « Previous Next »
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Rowdy
Comedian
Username: Rowdy

Post Number: 1707
Registered: 01-2010
Posted From: 98.193.70.249

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Posted on Thursday, March 18, 2010 - 12:20 am:       

hihi ... ee purpose ki ani kaadu kaanii

naaa profiles, addresses, passwords anni almost everything, in every website store cheskuntaanu xls file lo ... adi frequent gaa update chestaa email lo ... aa email ID, pwd close relatives ki telusu ...

enduku chesano telidu kaani adoka alavatu naku ... just in case computer crash aite ani pettanemo idivaraku ... ippudu idi chusaka anipiatundi ... emanna aite aa details anni unnai ani munde inform chesthe sari ... vallu teesestaru future lo :D
NHK pelli time ki act ledu, so he didnt do any crime. - N_U
 

Stud
Comedian
Username: Stud

Post Number: 1237
Registered: 04-2008
Posted From: 75.73.145.131

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Posted on Wednesday, March 17, 2010 - 11:52 pm:       

darunam ga vuntundhi emo appati dhaka manatho touch lo vunna vallaki..

ee madya naa dostho...pongal rojuna lorry kindha padi sachipoyadu....overtake cehyyaboyi,,,tvs handle thagili direct ga back tyres kindha padipoyindhi head anta....antha secons lo ayyipoyindhi...

antha 20 days mundhe babu puttadu..,,,yzag lo job chesthoo pandaakki gannavaram vachadu...

babu puttadu aani mail kodoa iahcadu...we ex'changed couple of emails...vaadu evevo invites pampevaadu as he is social n/wking person...aa sites nundi ippataiki vaadi peru meedha nakau reminders vasthunnayi...aa mail vachinapudalla naaku vaadu gurthchi badha anipisthundhi....epatikappudu spam aani set chesthunna...
Fan of IBDB Cop Chantodannai...
 

Guttonkay
Side Hero
Username: Guttonkay

Post Number: 2772
Registered: 05-2008
Posted From: 148.87.67.136

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Posted on Wednesday, March 17, 2010 - 10:39 pm:       

I was thinking about it today. I know someone who died and was a prolific poster. People did not know that person died and the few who did were devasted and all they had to go by was the posts.

These days you hear about someone's death and the first thing you do is google them and you end up in their facebook page or linkedin page. To think that they will never be updated again ...
 

Rekkadithe_gani_dokkadadhu
Junior Artist
Username: Rekkadithe_gani_dokkadadhu

Post Number: 806
Registered: 01-2010
Posted From: 68.206.114.127

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Posted on Wednesday, March 17, 2010 - 10:26 pm:       


Zulu:


Mr.Chitragupt sufer computer lo vaatini ofen sesi manam enni tappul sesamo lekka katti...vatiki saripada korada debbal istau anta....they will follow Us....
యుగానికొక్కడు-సచిన్
 

Zulu
Side Hero
Username: Zulu

Post Number: 3104
Registered: 02-2008
Posted From: 66.68.181.197

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Posted on Wednesday, March 17, 2010 - 10:10 pm:       

http://www.statesman.com/life/life-guide/what-happens-to-you r-web-stuff-after-you-356149.html

What happens to your Web stuff when you die? Your blogs, your Tweets, your Flickr photos, your business documents that live in the cloud?

And, to ponder a slightly less ominous question, what happens to your Web stuff when the services that house them die? What if the social media site that holds so many of your memories goes the way of the floppy disk?

Corvida Raven has been thinking about and researching both of those aspects of Web mortality, and she'll share what she's found at SXSW Interactive on Tuesday during a Core Conversation called "Your Online Identity After Death and Digital Wills."

"It's an intense topic," says Raven, who blogs about social media and Web technology at Shegeeks.net. Last year, Fast Company magazine named her to its list of the Most Influential Women in Technology.

Raven started exploring the topic as she thought about the long-term ramifications of working in the online world.

"This is where a lot of people are making money now," she says. If you're making a living from your blog, for example, you'll probably want to protect it (and its associated e-mail account, Flickr pool, etc.) after you're gone to make sure it keeps producing income for your family.

But doing business online is still a relatively new practice — and it's a rapidly evolving one, Raven says.

"It's such a new topic, and there's really nothing concrete around it, so I'm looking forward to the discussion at South by Southwest," she says.

Whether your Web presence is business, personal or both, just making sure that someone you trust knows where to find all your user names and passwords can make a huge difference for your survivors.

"You definitely want to make sure you have a record of your passwords that's as up-to-date as possible," Raven says. This helps survivors manage what happens to your accounts. Also think about leaving your loved ones guidance on what you want to happen to your social media profiles and Web sites after your death: Do you want your blog deleted, or left as it was as a memorial to you?

Your survivors might run into a few more problems if they're not able to log into your accounts, Raven says. Take e-mail. Providers have their own policies, Raven says, but for the most part they'll give your family your e-mails after your passing (some might require proof of death). But they tend to be stricter about revealing passwords, Raven says.

"You can understand it," Raven says. The companies' concern comes because so many of us use the same passwords for everything from e-mail to credit-card Web sites. "It gives them access to a wider range of stuff that you may not have wanted them to have access to."

If you want to take steps beyond leaving a list of user names and passwords for your loved ones, services like Legacy Locker (legacylocker.com) can help you set up beneficiaries to take over the accounts you specify, or you could even create your own document with a lawyer, Raven says.

Protect your memories

"Death is also part of technology," Raven says. Technologies change, with services shutting down and new ones emerging to take their place. Raven says she was drawn to the question of how to make sure the memories we have stored with various sites survive, even if the sites themselves go away.

"My memories are not in photographs anymore," she says "My memories are on Facebook, or my memories are being TwitPic'ed to the world. How will my kids be able to see this in the future? How will they be able to revisit my 20s the way I revisited my mom's 20s through photo albums?"

The question led her to make some changes in her online habits.

"I've been a little more careful, and also more aware, of what I'm signing up for," she says. Instead of service hopping, look for tools and sites that have a track record and should stick around for the long haul, she says.

Staying ahead of technological change is yet one more reason to back up the things that are most important to you, Raven says. She backs up her photos to CDs — she figures they'll be around at least five more years and that there will be a good conversion option to whatever storage form comes next. "This is my own legacy that I want to make sure I have intact for my kids in the future," she says.
Maathru bhasha vegataipoyina mudanastapu jathi manadhi

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