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by pseingatl 4210 days ago
If Google were to reliably accede to your request, sure. If it was just a question of filling out a form, sure. But if there's a single hiccup, you're lost. You are completely dependent on Google's goodwill. They have no incentive to destroy records? They don't, but Google has no incentive to comply with individual requests either. Have you tried to reach Google customer service lately? Oh wait, they don't have customer service. Or they sorta kinda do, if you're buying advertising.

But the issue is greater than just Google--the issue is the disposition of digital assets after death. Why should digital assets be treated differently from any other asset? If you think that banks gleefully return money to a decedent's family after death you haven't dealt with this issue much. Having the power to issue court orders tends to enforce the rights of the heirs.

Or you can just hide from those terrible lawyers, mail forms to Google (or e-mail them, everyone knows e-mails always arrive) and hope for the best.

I hope it works out for you.

1 comments

This is a surprisingly strong response.. I mean no disrespect to lawyers but they're expensive and often unnecessary for simple matters. If for whatever reason Google gives you the run around, by all means, get a lawyer involved -- it's not like there's a deadline to retrieve your data.

> If you think that banks gleefully return money to a decedent's family after death you haven't dealt with this issue much.

I actually just went through this and to be honest, it was completely painless. Maybe it was a good bank compared to most, and it was definitely a small-balance account, but a single form verifying next-of-kin faxed with a copy of the death certificate was enough to get access to the account.