this post was submitted on 11 Jan 2025
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Another thing to consider is that you won't know immediately that the information you stumbles upon is incriminating. Sometimes it may take years until you have all the pieces of the puzzle.
Fwiw I've actually thought about a dead man's switch for a while now. When my partner and I were going through end-of-life stuff, having the ability to delete or open things as needed after you're dead can be important.
I have a rough design in my head where you register various monitors (e.g. checking email, logging into Lemmy, etc) and so long as you reach a specified threshold you're considered alive.
Build in a duress code or dead code that can be entered by your next of kin, then you got something workable.
For a dead drop like you described in your OP, I agree that instructions to an attorney is probably your best bet. But in the scenario you're describing, it sounds like having this code won't be valuable.