Facebook will become the world’s biggest virtual graveyard with more profiles of dead people than living users by the end of the century, say experts
- The living will be outnumbered by the dead by 2098 according to a statistician
- Facebook, which currently has 1.5billion users, refuses to delete dead users
- The social network instead turns the account into a 'memorialized' version
- For more of the latest Facebook news visit www.dailymail.co.uk/facebook
The
social network, which currently has 1.5billion users worldwide, will
turn into the world’s biggest virtual graveyard by 2098.
Facebook’s
refusal to automatically delete dead users automatically and the
plateauing membership of the site means that the living will be
outnumbered sooner than you might think.
Facebook, which currently has
1.5billion users worldwide, will turn into the world's biggest virtual
graveyard by 2098, a statistician has claimed
Hachem
Sadikki, a PhD candidate in statistics at University of Massachusetts,
said that he worked out the figure by assuming that Facebook’s growth
will begin to slow soon.
In the US, 70 per cent of the adult population has signed up and in the UK the number is more than half.
Sadikki also assumed that Facebook will retain its existing policy on how to handle dead users.
Currently when a user, dies Facebook does not delete the account and instead turns it into a ‘memorialized’ version of the page.
The only way to delete the account of a dead person is if somebody has their password and can login and close it down.
But given that few people give anyone their Facebook login, the page is likely to stay up long after they have died.
Online
legacy planning company called the Digital Beyond has claimed that
970,000 Facebook users will die this year alone across the world.
That compares to 385,968 in 2010 and 580,000 in 2012.
Facebook’s
policy on dead users had led to criticism as some families want more
control over how their loved ones are remembered online.
Some dead people still appear as having birthdays in users’ news feeds and alerts despite having passed away.
The only way to delete the account of a dead person is if somebody has their password and can login and close it down
Facebook
has tried to get around the problem by asking users to appoint a
‘Legacy Contact’, a sort of online executor of their will, before they
die.
The Legacy Contact can administer the page after you pass away by writing one last post and even approving new friend requests.
The contact can also update your cover and profile photo to something more appropriate after you have died.
Facebook declined to comment when asked about its own projection for when dead users will outnumber the living.