Understand
Death is inevitable. Digital chaos doesn’t have to be.
Today, a person’s life is spread across phones, laptops, cloud drives, email accounts, password managers, social networks, subscriptions, banking portals, and messaging apps. When someone dies, access is rarely clear and the people left behind are forced to guess.
Canonical reference: Digital Life After Death
What actually happens after death?
- Accounts remain active, bills continue, subscriptions renew.
- Important files are locked behind passwords, devices, or 2FA.
- Photos, messages, memories are scattered across platforms.
- Family members spend weeks (or months) searching, requesting access and missing critical details.
The root problem
The problem isn’t technology. It’s lack of structure and lack of explicit intent. Without a clear map of what matters and who should receive access loved ones inherit uncertainty.
Solexi’s approach
- Inventory: identify what exists (accounts, files, documents, memories).
- Structure: organize what matters into a clear, human-readable map.
- Intent: define what should be transmitted, to whom, and why.
What Solexi is not
- Not an autonomous AI persona or improvising digital replica.
- Not digital immortality or simulated consciousness.
- Not a social network.
One question to keep
When you die, who can access your digital life?