Ask HN: Do seniors feel that preserving their legacy is important?
I'm thinking about building a site to allow people to preserve their legacy and I was wondering, do seniors feel that it's necessary to preserve their legacy for future generations? Do you have more that you'd like to share with your children/grandchildren that you feel they don't know?
And on the flip side, do you, as someone with elderly parents/grandparents, feel that you'd like to know more about them?
6 comments
[ 3.4 ms ] story [ 86.3 ms ] threadSecondly, the second you put your legacy on paper, that's it. You can no longer update it with more memories. It's frozen in that state. With this website, they'd be able to continuously update it with stories, photos, etc.
Maybe "preserving their legacy" wasn't the correct term to use. On this website, the person will be directed down memory lane prompted to answer questions, add stories, family members, friends, childhood memories, photos, etc.
Additionally, children, parents, and relatives will all be able to link up their own personal accounts to build an accumulated family legacy.
But your point is valid, however. The older generation do like tangible items which is why an additional feature of the website would be to generate a memory album book from the information they've already provided.
> Secondly, the second you put your legacy on paper, that's it. You can no longer update it with more memories. It's frozen in that state.
But it isn't frozen. You can change it or add onto it.
You can think of "preserving your legacy" as a low-read, low-write data type. Once someone does this, they aren't likely to go back and edit it. They may add onto it with photos and whatnot, but they probably won't make changes to old content on a regular basis.
> With this website, they'd be able to continuously update it with stories, photos, etc.
To the extent people already do this (I have personally never seen it), they can just as easily use Facebook as a "digital scrapbook" so to speak. They can post all these types of content now, and their family already have access to it.
> Additionally, children, parents, and relatives will all be able to link up their own personal accounts to build an accumulated family legacy.
It seems like people largely preserve their memories as photos with captions. Again, it's something they do on Facebook, and they don't have to convince relatives to use it. All their relatives (especially older ones) already have accounts and previously-made connections.
> The older generation do like tangible items
I actually disagree. I don't think they care that much about tangible items. I do think they have a sense of how "long-lived" a medium is. They likely don't think of Facebook photo albums as something that will last for 20 years.
But that's not something any digital property can solve. People know that the web is ephemeral, and the content disappears as soon as the backing entity runs out of money. You'd have to establish some kind of trust to guarantee you'd be around for decades, similar to what graveyards do.
"Trying to go straight, ex-gangster Jimmy "The Saint" Tosnia runs Afterlife Advice in Denver, where dying people videotape messages for their loved ones."