6. 1. no1 b4 me. srsly. 2. dnt wrshp pix/idols 3. no omgs 4. no wrk on w/end (sat 4 now; sun l8r) 5. pos ok - ur m&d r cool 6. dnt kill ppl 7. :-X only w/ m8 8. dnt steal 9. dnt lie re: bf 10. dnt ogle ur bf's m8. or ox. or dnkey. myob.
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Notas del editor
Cf Wordswoth’s love letters Twitter 10 commandments
A Where does an eBay ID fall?? A WoW sword? A blog? First 2 have economic value, latter has “IP” rights that persist to heirs – but are we talking the letter or the cooyright in the letter?
Launched April 2009 Launched april 2009 Encrypts all user’s passwords etc and he tells them who to send them to on death. Court order?No effect because they don’t have control over it once encrypted. Would have to seek ct order eg against g/f if law said wife was to inherit all DA s and he had entrusted it to g/f. By which time she could have deleted or copied..? “ Entrepreneurs in Silicon Valley, always alive to the next big thing, may have found a solution. This week, a website called Legacy Locker has launched in the United States. It not only provides a storage space for wills, farewell letters and other such documentation, but also a master list of user names and programs for online bank accounts, social networking sites and document repositories. Subscribers to the service create a list of their online profiles and passwords, be it the log-in details for their computer, banking service or even their iTunes music store account, and nominate a “beneficiary” to receive this information in the event of their untimely demise. It means that their Facebook profile, email address or Twitter account can be disabled after they die, and that nominated relatives can assume ownership of their digital ephemera on their behalf.