By far, the strangest behavior I feel are those families that keep the page active for years afterward complete with someone else logging in, posting updates, and accepting friend requests. Who is making friend requests to someone they know is dead? Facebook to me has always seemed a platform of connecting and sharing, and neither of these would seem to be something your average dead person would longer have need for, no matter their religious affiliation. It’s of no benefit to the deceased, and I don’t see how it helps the living. What’s next, Foursquare checkins for them at the graveyard?
Don’t get me wrong, it is a terrible thing when anyone dies, and those most important to us should be remembered. I’d even go as far as saying that creating a Facebook page called “we will always miss you, John/Jane Smith” or something of the sort would be a great tribute on Facebook. But keeping their standard friend profile, subjecting a deceased loved one to Farmville and online quiz requests just seems in poor taste.
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NPR did a story on this as well....it is interesting topic isn't it? Love the headstone too :)