Harbinja, Morse and Edwards, ‘Digital Remains and Post-mortem Privacy in the UK: What do users want?’

ABSTRACT
The information age has led to extensive personal data aggregation, posing various challenges for posthumous privacy and digital remains. Users are often unaware of tools for managing their digital remains, laws in the area are predominantly silent or inadequate, and the scholarship has argued for appropriate legal and technological solutions. Our study of 1,766 adult UK residents’ attitudes, the first of its kind in the UK, reveals a desire for control over digital remains but low awareness and utilization of existing tools. These phenomena are known in the literature as the posthumous privacy paradox and the inverted posthumous privacy paradox. Based on our findings, complemented by earlier theoretical and doctrinal research, our recommendations include law reforms in data protection and recognition of online tools for managing digital remains, as well as a more comprehensive EU-wide reform that includes several relevant areas of law.

Harbinja, Edina and Morse, Tal and Edwards, Lilian, Digital Remains and Post-mortem Privacy in the UK: What do users want? (March 27, 2024), BILETA 2024 Conference Paper.

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