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Grieving parents can inherit their late daughter’s Facebook account, Germany’s top court finds

The girl’s mother argued the contents of her daughter’s Facebook account are legally identical to a private diary or letters that might be inherited by loved ones after a person’s death

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FILE PHOTO: A 3D plastic representation of the Facebook logo is seen in this illustration in Zenica, Bosnia and Herzegovina, May 13, 2015. REUTERS/Dado Ruvic/File Photo

Germany’s top court ruled on Thursday that Facebook should grant a grieving mother access to her dead daughter’s account, in a landmark judgement for how social network data is treated after its owners pass away.

Judges at the Federal Constitutional Court in Karlsruhe found that the daughter’s contract with Facebook was part of her legacy and should be passed on to the mother, giving her full access to the daughter’s account including her posts and private messages.

“The contract covering a user account with a social network is transferred to the heirs of the original owner of the account,” they said.

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Those heirs “have a claim on the network operator for access to the account including communications data,” the ruling continued.

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The mother has battled Facebook through a years-long series of appeals after her 15-year-old daughter was killed by an underground train in 2012. She hopes the data will shed light on whether the death was an accident or a suicide.

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