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Send Emails After Your Death

Roland Piquepaille writes "As you all know, the two things in life you can't avoid are taxes and death. But if you will no longer have to pay taxes after your death, you will be able to send email thanks to a new service, Mylastemail.com. The Los Angeles Times (free registration needed) says this service will cost you $9.99 for a three-year subscription. The company says you can update your farewell messages from anywhere in the world, including cybercafes or airports." If it's not a hoax, it's a pretty cool service.

5 of 271 comments (clear)

  1. Dead Man's Switch by Plug · · Score: 4, Informative

    Sounds very much like the Dead Man's Switch that was covered on Slashdot a while back...

    If you don't tell it you're alive every now and then, it can encrypt your files, send email, and post messages on the web. Very paranoia.

  2. Nothing like Dead Man's Switch by MyNameIsFred · · Score: 2, Informative

    If you read the mylastemail website, they give you a printed document that you keep where people will find it when you die (e.g., with your will). When they receive the printed document in the snail-mail, mylastemail will email out your last messages. So if they never receive the snail-mail, they never send your messages. Whereas with Dead Man's Switch, you have to proactively reset a switch to prevent automatic actions from taking place.

  3. Talk to these guys by AndroidCat · · Score: 2, Informative
    The story
    " An Austrian architecture firm has designed a high-tech monument and grave site concept to be available to clients in the United States beginning this summer.The design combines earth, water and light with stainless steel, solar cells and an LED display reminiscent of a calculator."
    LEDs are kind of tacky. I'd go for wide-screen and surround sound.
    --
    One line blog. I hear that they're called Twitters now.
  4. A wierder alternative... by Andy_R · · Score: 2, Informative

    mydeath.net is a free site (set up by writer, artist and ex pop star Bill Drummond of the KLF) where you can leave full instructions for what you want done in the event of your death, write your own obituary, and so on.

    Halfway between a service and a conceptual work of modern art, it's got more entertainment value than giving 9.99 a quarter to some venture capitalists, plus you can browse other people's (anonymous) speficications for their demise while you are waiting to die.

    --
    A pizza of radius z and thickness a has a volume of pi z z a
  5. Re:My letter.... by Dwonis · · Score: 3, Informative

    Read their website. Apparently, you send them a 3DES-encrypted message, and then arrange for the key to be snail-mailed to them upon your death.