This article explores the awareness of and sentiments toward digital legacy through eleven semistructured interviews carried out in Copenhagen in January 2013. It focuses primarily on the methodical aspects and considerations of the conducted study. In short, digital legacy in this review refers to the digital artefacts people consider worthy of preserving either for practical, historical, sentimental or even economical reasons, and which are most often inaccessible due to password protection (Waagstein 2013). The study is based upon the premise that very few people presumably give thought to their digital legacy1 due to the subject matter’s novelty. Death aware2 respondents were chosen to increase the probability of getting valid data, sin...
A number of digital platforms and services have recently emerged that allow users to create posthumo...
This paper asks whether increased attention to notions of online legacy or digital afterlife could i...
Almost ubiquitous hardware technology, such as smart phones, ensures that social networking sites ar...
In this article we present a concept for a ubiquitous service that allows memories to be saved and s...
Background Digital legacy refers to the online content available about someone following their death...
This special issue entitled “Futures of Digital Death: Mobilities of Loss and Commemoration“ explore...
As technology adoption continues to increase across the lifespan, the question of what happens to th...
Background: The Internet is the biggest and most ‘disruptive’ force since the industrial revolution....
Background: Digital legacy refers to the online content available about someone following their deat...
Bereavement practices with the material legacies of the dead are known to be deeply complex, multifa...
Today, humans have remains that are other than physical, generated within and supported by new infor...
<p>People generate vast quantities of digital information as a product of their interactions with di...
Despite the range of studies into grief and mourning in relation to the digital, research to date la...
Reminiscence as a mental and social process gains more meaningfulness when people get older. In this...
© 2015 Taylor & Francis. This article identifies and outlines some of the more prominent ways that d...
A number of digital platforms and services have recently emerged that allow users to create posthumo...
This paper asks whether increased attention to notions of online legacy or digital afterlife could i...
Almost ubiquitous hardware technology, such as smart phones, ensures that social networking sites ar...
In this article we present a concept for a ubiquitous service that allows memories to be saved and s...
Background Digital legacy refers to the online content available about someone following their death...
This special issue entitled “Futures of Digital Death: Mobilities of Loss and Commemoration“ explore...
As technology adoption continues to increase across the lifespan, the question of what happens to th...
Background: The Internet is the biggest and most ‘disruptive’ force since the industrial revolution....
Background: Digital legacy refers to the online content available about someone following their deat...
Bereavement practices with the material legacies of the dead are known to be deeply complex, multifa...
Today, humans have remains that are other than physical, generated within and supported by new infor...
<p>People generate vast quantities of digital information as a product of their interactions with di...
Despite the range of studies into grief and mourning in relation to the digital, research to date la...
Reminiscence as a mental and social process gains more meaningfulness when people get older. In this...
© 2015 Taylor & Francis. This article identifies and outlines some of the more prominent ways that d...
A number of digital platforms and services have recently emerged that allow users to create posthumo...
This paper asks whether increased attention to notions of online legacy or digital afterlife could i...
Almost ubiquitous hardware technology, such as smart phones, ensures that social networking sites ar...