Saturday, May 18, 2024
ADVT 
Tech

Facebook To Let Users Nominate Online Heirs

IANS, 13 Feb, 2015 12:57 PM
  • Facebook To Let Users Nominate Online Heirs
Facebook has announced that it will allow users to designate a family member as their online "heir" to manage their account and make comments in their name after their death.
 
According to the announcement made Thursday, the heir will also be able to respond to requests from the deceased person's friends or relatives, who are not connected on Facebook, update the photo in the person's profile and file comments and photos of the deceased person on the social network.
 
The service initially will be available only in the US, although Facebook is planning to expand it to other countries.
 
If the users prefer, they will also be able to inform Facebook to close the deceased person's account.
 
Till now, the social network, after receiving notification that a person has died, allowed the account to remain online, but frozen -- or "memorialised" -- and thus without the possibility of editing it.
 
"By talking to people who have experienced loss, we realised there is more we can do to support those who are grieving..." Facebook said.
 
Less than a dozen US states have laws to regulate online activities.
 
Virginia, for instance, allows the parents or legal representatives of a Facebook user to take control of the account if the user dies.
 
Google in 2013 became the first large Internet firm to allow users to select online heirs for Gmail accounts and cloud storage services, among other things. 

MORE Tech ARTICLES

Google Glass app that gives users encyclopaedic knowledge

Google Glass app that gives users encyclopaedic knowledge
Although the immediate commercial future of Google Glass appears bleak, a series of apps to be showcased here this coming weekend and deployable...

Google Glass app that gives users encyclopaedic knowledge

World's fastest camera is here

World's fastest camera is here
A team of biomedical engineers has developed the world's fastest camera, a device that can capture events up to 100 billion frames per second....

World's fastest camera is here

Twitter improves tools to block annoying users

Twitter improves tools to block annoying users
In the new process, users can now report abuse with fewer steps and those not directly involved in the abuse can flag the abuse more easily....

Twitter improves tools to block annoying users

Free falling iPhone to rotate in mid-air to prevent damage

Free falling iPhone to rotate in mid-air to prevent damage
The next time your iPhone is about to fall onto the ground, it might just rotate in mid-air and save itself from damage....

Free falling iPhone to rotate in mid-air to prevent damage

App to save footballers suffering sudden cardiac arrest

App to save footballers suffering sudden cardiac arrest
A new app will help anyone attending sports events to identify and treat sudden cardiac arrest (SCA) on the football field and save lives in emergencies....

App to save footballers suffering sudden cardiac arrest

Bell's CraveTV launches next week for $4 a month

Bell's CraveTV launches next week for $4 a month
Bell's streaming competitor to Netflix and Shomi will launch to "TV lovers" next week at about half the price.

Bell's CraveTV launches next week for $4 a month