Comments on: Yahoo denies family access to dead marine's e-mail
Father of slain soldier wants to remember his son in words. Web giant refuses, citing privacy practices.
Father of slain soldier wants to remember his son in words. Web giant refuses, citing privacy practices.
November 30, 2009 6:01 PM PST
November 30, 2009 5:00 PM PST
November 30, 2009 4:48 PM PST
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It was the son's mailbox and maybe not all the information in it is related to the father.
A mailbox is private like a diary.
My thoughts are with the family,
n3td3v
How did you come to the conclusion that ‘personal items the soldier does not wish to share with his family’ exist ONLY in his email? How did you come to the conclusion that there are no ‘personal items the soldier does not wish to share with his family’ anywhere else in his belongings? Did you ASSUME? (The correct answer here would be ‘YES’)
If this Marines' parents have been named executors of his estate (for those of you in Rio Linda, an ‘estate’ is all of a persons property and assets), then they are LEGALLY entitled to access ALL his possessions, documents and correspondence, INCLUDING ALL HIS EMAIL, Yahoos' policy and your well-intended but misguided sense of privacy be damned.
Additionally, if I am not mistaken courts have generally ruled that the 'right to privacy' generally does not extend to the deceased.
If there are laws governing this matter, then it's a non-issue, but don't try to hold up existing USMC policy to support it, as it's simply untrue.
I too believe have heard that the rights of the deceased are not the same as those alive. In this case, I feel Yahoo is perfectly valid in their response, but could at least extend the deletion period.
Someone died, unexpectedly, and as such has left unfinished business. Yahoo should have the deceny and good business sense to see that extending the deletion policy beyond 90 days to allow the family to take appropriate action neither violates their precious privacy policy ( which is self imposed and may be amended at anytime making it weak in a court of law, look at other privacy suits ) nor tarnishes their image as this has done.
Privacy is important but nothing is truly private in the end ( can we say Strom Thurmond's daughter).
My thoughts are with the family through this difficult time and Thank-you to all the brave soldiers fighting overseas for a better world.
- by fonline April 21, 2009 5:24 PM PDT
- Its a lesson for us to keep secret informaiton very secret and atleast at some where, in a locker or in a Will, so that our family or kids may not suffer after our death. My brother died and i am having the same problem but i agree to the yahoo concerns. Its our responsibility to keeps things straights even after death. wish all of you very good luck.
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- by mellincoly September 13, 2009 3:50 PM PDT
- My brother died nearly 4 years ago, and today I got an email from his yahoo account with a spam ad embedded. It was sent to all his contacts from 4 years ago! How is this possible if they delete inactive accounts after 90 days? I never had the password and it never mattered before, but it was awful getting the message. I searched the yahoo site but could not find a person to contact to ask them to look into and deactivate the account. ANy suggestions?
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