About
About 0xDEAD
One sysadmin, a rabbit hole, and a draft RFC.
Last updated 2026-03-23
·
Reviewed 2026-03-31
A research project turned proposed RFC about what happens to your digital life when you die. The site speaks for itself — start with the research, read the RFC, or try the playground.
Built by one sysadmin. No company. No funding. Open under CC BY-SA 4.0. Get in touch and tell me what I got wrong.
Let's Talk About It
This project lives on the AT Protocol — the same decentralized identity layer the RFC builds on. Have thoughts, questions, or objections? Find us on Bluesky and let's have the conversation.
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FAQ
Questions I ask myself
Is this a joke?
No. Maybe? I don't know — I hope not. The domain
0xDEAD.space seemed amusing, so I bought it, and things spiraled from there. The problem is very much not a joke. There have been a number of notable deaths in the developer and creator community recently, and I'd be willing to bet that few had any rock-solid succession plans so their important work could live on. Every open-source maintainer is a single point of failure, and we should get better as a community about handing off the baton in the event of our death. The name is memorable, and it's honest about what this is about.Wait — is this an actual product?
No. 0xDEAD is a protocol specification built on the AT Protocol — the same infrastructure that powers Bluesky. The RFC defines two custom lexicons, an inverted liveness model using blinded heartbeats, and a DID key rotation mechanism for succession. The building blocks are real and running in production. The composition is new. Whether it becomes something real depends on whether anyone else cares enough to help build it.
Do I need a Bluesky account?
No. In fact, that's kind of the point. You need an AT Protocol identity (a
did:plc), which you can get through Bluesky or any AT Protocol PDS provider in the Atmosphere. You could even create your own. Your heartbeat attesters — the people and services that prove you're alive — don't need ATProto accounts at all. They attest through any channel: an app, a web form, even an email link. The idea is that this will be built to be flexible, portable, secure — just like your did:plc is designed to be — and yours. You can even have your liveness attested anonymously — proximity attestation uses encrypted BLE beacons (think StreetPass meets Apple Find My) so nearby users can passively confirm you're alive without either party revealing who they are or where they are. The whole protocol is essentially a dead man's switch you don't have to remember to pull — your lawyer, your family, your phone, even strangers on the street are all quietly proving you're still here. When they stop, the protocol notices.What if the protocol triggers and everyone thinks I'm dead? "I don't want to go on the cart yet! I feel happy!"
It can't execute without real-world proof. Silent heartbeats are a signal, not a trigger — they start an investigation, not a succession. Your successor might see "professional contacts: inactive" and call your lawyer, but nobody touches your keys until designated verifiers submit actual death attestations backed by real evidence — a death certificate, an attorney with personal knowledge, a government registry. Even then, your
did:plc recovery key can override any succession within the 72-hour recovery window. The protocol escalates slowly, requires human judgment at every step, and gives you the last word — unless, of course, you don't have one.What stops someone from faking death attestations?
Three layers. First, the inverted heartbeat model — multiple independent sources (service logins, professional contacts, family) passively attest to your liveness. All of them have to go silent before escalation even begins. Second, threshold death attestation — you designate multiple verifiers (attorney, family, notary) and set a threshold like 2 of 3. Third, the 72-hour safety valve — your DID PLC recovery key can override any succession within 72 hours. If you're alive, you can stop it.
What's the deal with `0xDEAD`?
In hexadecimal,
0xDEAD (57005 in decimal) is a hexspeak constant used in low-level programming as a marker for uninitialized or freed memory. It means "this memory is dead — don't use it." I thought it was appropriate.