Leaving More Than Passwords Behind: Building a Private Family Legacy | Omar Alvarez

What happens when the fear of a dementia diagnosis at age 10 turns into a lifelong obsession with legacy? In this episode of The Digital Legacy Podcast, host Niki Weiss, Digital Thanatologist, sits down with Omar Alvarez, founder of the new app Connect. Omar shares how his grandfather's struggle with dementia—and a friend's tragic passing at 31—fueled his mission to create a global, privacy-first platform that captures the "human" side of our digital footprint before it's too late. Together, they explore why the American definition of legacy is fundamentally broken, how to break free from the "addictive" design of traditional social media, and why capturing your true thoughts in your 30s isn't "weird"—it's an act of love for future generations. You’ll discover: Why Connect was built without search bars, ads, or bots, ensuring your family's history remains a protected, private ecosystem. How an AI-enabled daily question can prompt wholesome, vulnerable reflections on your life, tailored to your unique cultural and personal history. Why legal documents and financial assets only solve half the legacy puzzle, and why recipes, memories, and 100-year-old pasta sauces matter just as much. Why traditional genealogy only provides "dots" on a map, and how Connect aims to fill those dots with the actual life stories that explain our generational trauma and triumphs. Omar’s newly built AI feature that acts as a proactive family archivist, checking in and prompting you to capture vital legacy details before a crisis hits. Why Omar refuses to market on Facebook or Instagram, choosing instead to partner with estate planners, dementia centers, and cancer organizations to meet families exactly when they need connection most. Because as Omar reminds us, "We are capturing our legacy every single day, whether we realize it or not."

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What happens when the fear of a dementia diagnosis at age 10 turns into a lifelong obsession with legacy?

In this episode of The Digital Legacy Podcast, host Niki Weiss, Digital Thanatologist, sits down with Omar Alvarez, founder of the new app Connect. Omar shares how his grandfather's struggle with dementia—and a friend's tragic passing at 31—fueled his mission to create a global, privacy-first platform that captures the "human" side of our digital footprint before it's too late.

Together, they explore why the American definition of legacy is fundamentally broken, how to break free from the "addictive" design of traditional social media, and why capturing your true thoughts in your 30s isn't "weird"—it's an act of love for future generations.

You’ll discover:

  • Why Connect was built without search bars, ads, or bots, ensuring your family's history remains a protected, private ecosystem.

  • How an AI-enabled daily question can prompt wholesome, vulnerable reflections on your life, tailored to your unique cultural and personal history.

  • Why legal documents and financial assets only solve half the legacy puzzle, and why recipes, memories, and 100-year-old pasta sauces matter just as much.

  • Why traditional genealogy only provides "dots" on a map, and how Connect aims to fill those dots with the actual life stories that explain our generational trauma and triumphs.

  • Omar’s newly built AI feature that acts as a proactive family archivist, checking in and prompting you to capture vital legacy details before a crisis hits.

  • Why Omar refuses to market on Facebook or Instagram, choosing instead to partner with estate planners, dementia centers, and cancer organizations to meet families exactly when they need connection most.

Because as Omar reminds us, "We are capturing our legacy every single day, whether we realize it or not."



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What happens when the "worst thing you’ve ever done" is the only way society defines you, even as you face your final breath? In this moving episode of The Digital Legacy Podcast, host Niki Weiss, Digital Thanatologist, sits down with Fernando Murillo, a lead trainer for the Humane Prison Hospice Project. Fernando shares his remarkable journey from being incarcerated at age 16 to serving as a peer caregiver in California’s prison hospice system for over five years. They explore the "carceral end-of-life crisis," where one in five incarcerated people in the You’ll discover: The reality of the only licensed hospice in the California prison system and how it operates in the face of restrictive carceral laws. Fernando’s philosophy on why kindness and trust are the most valuable assets in the end-of-life journey. How incarcerated caregivers act as scribes and witnesses to the legacies of those society has "swept under the carpet". Why the Humane Prison Hospice Project provides more extensive end-of-life training than many traditional medical schools. The staggering data showing how hospice work fundamentally rehabilitates those providing the care. The new infrastructure being built to provide a dignified "destination" for cancer patients released from prison to die in the community. Because if we can foster compassion and dignity in the most restrictive settings on earth, there is no excuse for not doing it in our own communities.

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