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by csydas 3746 days ago
To be fair, long absences from Facebook are likely not uncommon. Personally, I signed up when I was in University and it was restricted as such, stopped using it pretty much immediately, and only very recently after moving abroad did I start using it again to keep in touch with friends and colleagues, meaning a gap of almost 10 years.

During that time, Facebook wasn't shy about reminding me that I wasn't using it, and frequently sent emails suggesting content on Facebook I might want to see. An auto-hibernate or shut down for accounts seems unlikely as it's contrary to their attempts at retention.

I think death is just something that Facebook hasn't really taken the time to establish a good public protocol for; per your post, the behind the scenes protocol of "fax us an ID and death certificate" is probably outside the comfort zone of a lot of people. Maybe it would work for people to establish a series of emergency contacts and grant the contacts a page where a certain number (at least more than one) are needed to confirm the passing of a person, at which point the page moves into the memorialized mode. The process should also have safeguards to be reversible, just in case of pranks, and allow alternative proof methods just in case the contacts are unreachable/unwilling to confirm.

1 comments

I wonder how many dead people are still showing up as active users on dating sites like match.com/etc and are still getting messages from people.