• This looks promising

    From Sean Dennis@618:618/1 to All on Thu Jan 15 17:54:07 2026
    (I just wear a Life Alert; no phone needed!)

    From: https://shorturl.at/aR2fy (nypost.com)

    ===
    Morbid `Are You Dead' app is the new panic button -- for lonely young singles afraid of dying alone

    By Ben Cost
    Published Jan. 13, 2026, 2:54 p.m. ET

    It's like Life Alert -- for the young and dateless.

    A trending Chinese app is helping combat the nationwide loneliness
    epidemic by keeping tabs on singletons who live alone to make sure that
    they're alive.

    The grimly dubbed "Are You Dead?" app requires users to click a giant
    green button with a ghost on it every two days to verify that they're
    still breathing, China's state newspaper The Global Times reported. If
    they neglect to check in, the app will email the person's emergency
    contact on the third day and inform them that they could be in trouble.

    On the English-language site, where it's officially known as Demumu,
    developers said they reportedly devised this "lightweight safety tool"
    to make "solitary life more reassuring."

    "Whether you're a solo office worker, a student living away from home,
    or anyone choosing a solitary lifestyle, Demumu serves as your safety
    companion," the page describes.

    Since debuting in May to little fanfare, the $1.15 single status
    tracker has taken the digital sphere by storm, becoming the most
    downloaded paid app on China's Apple store.

    Techsperts attribute "Are You Dead?'s" [sic] popularity to the epidemic of
    people living by themselves in Chinese cities -- the fallout from the
    One-Child policies, rapid urbanization that separated people from their
    families and other factors, Gizmodo reported.

    According to Global Times, the country is projected to have 200 million
    one-person households by the year 2030.

    "People who live alone at any stage of their life need something like
    this, as do introverts, those with depression, the unemployed and
    others in vulnerable situations," said one user on Chinese social
    media, the BBC reported.

    One user, Wilson Hou, 38, who lives around 100km (62 miles) from his
    family, said he downloaded the singleton tracker so that his loved ones
    could collect his body if he died.

    While he commutes home to be with his wife and kid twice a week, Hou
    said he has to be away from them for the time being for a project, so
    he spends most nights on the job site in Beijing.

    "I worry that if something happened to me, I could die alone in the
    place I rent and no one would know," he said. "That's why I downloaded
    the app and I set my mum as my emergency contact."

    However, others were put off by the somewhat morbid name, with some
    suggesting they change it to "Are You Alive?"

    "Death has both a literal and sociological meaning," said one social
    media commenter. "If it were changed to `Are You Alive,' I would pay to
    download it."

    Reps for the firm behind the app, Moonscape Technologies, said they'd
    be refining the product by "adding a messaging function," and mulling
    over people's name suggestions.

    They also pledged to explore similar products that catered to the
    elderly -- a must in a nation where a fifth of the population is over
    60.

    It's yet unclear if/when this app is winging its way to the US, which
    has also been suffering from a severe loneliness scourge, especially
    among young men.

    A new Gallup poll last May has revealed that US Gen Z and millennial
    men are the loneliest (25%) compared to only 18% of American women in
    the same age group.

    According to the study, one in four American men under 35 feels more
    isolated than their peers in other countries -- including France,
    Canada, Ireland and Spain.
    ===

    -- Sean

    ... If you want your friends to remember you, borrow something from them.
    --- MultiMail/Linux
    * Origin: Outpost BBS * Johnson City, TN (618:618/1)
  • From August Abolins@618:400/23.10 to Sean Dennis on Thu Jan 15 20:07:00 2026
    Hello Sean!

    ** On Thursday 15.01.26 - 17:54, you wrote:

    (I just wear a Life Alert; no phone needed!)

    From: https://shorturl.at/aR2fy (nypost.com)

    ===
    Morbid `Are You Dead' app is the new panic button -- for lonely young singles afraid of dying alone

    By Ben Cost
    Published Jan. 13, 2026, 2:54 p.m. ET

    It's like Life Alert -- for the young and dateless.

    A trending Chinese app is helping combat the nationwide
    loneliness epidemic by keeping tabs on singletons who
    live alone to make sure that they're alive.


    The Chinese do tend to always trigger some "trend" report. I
    see a problem with the stupid app. What if the phone is lost
    or stolen or simply needs a charge first? - that will trigger
    alerts for no necessary reason.
    --
    ../|ug

    --- OpenXP 5.0.64
    * Origin: (618:400/23.10)