diff --git a/blog/assets/images/the-fight-for-privacy-after-death/cover.webp b/blog/assets/images/the-fight-for-privacy-after-death/cover.webp new file mode 100644 index 00000000..02b95815 Binary files /dev/null and b/blog/assets/images/the-fight-for-privacy-after-death/cover.webp differ diff --git a/blog/posts/the-fight-for-privacy-after-death.md b/blog/posts/the-fight-for-privacy-after-death.md index 2a22e85c..e8f2f299 100644 --- a/blog/posts/the-fight-for-privacy-after-death.md +++ b/blog/posts/the-fight-for-privacy-after-death.md @@ -7,11 +7,24 @@ authors: - ptrmdn description: In 2020, London police failed to save two sisters in life, then violated their privacy in death. This is a call to arms for posthumous privacy rights. schema_type: OpinionNewsArticle +preview: + cover: blog/assets/images/the-fight-for-privacy-after-death/cover.webp --- # Ghosts in the Machine: The Fight for Privacy After Death + + +Photo: Panyawat Auitpol / Unsplash + In the early hours of 6 June 2020, Nicole Smallman and her sister Bibaa had just finished celebrating Bibaa’s birthday with friends in a park in London. Alone and in the dark, they were [fatally and repeatedly stabbed](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Murders_of_Bibaa_Henry_and_Nicole_Smallman) 36 times. +
Guest Contributor
+ +Please welcome Peter Marsden as a first-time guest contributor! Privacy Guides does not publish guest posts in exchange for compensation, and this tutorial was independently reviewed by our editorial team prior to publication. + +