Tracking your digital worth for the next generation
Tracking
your digital worth for the next generation
The value
of our online lives is worth billions of pounds but many of these assets may
never be passed on, as people are failing to record their digital worth.
In research undertaken by accountants
PWC, the value of our digital assets was estimated at £25bn, yet in a YouGov poll
over half of those surveyed admitted nobody would be able to access such assets
after their deaths, as they had not made any arrangements to deal with what
would happen.
As a result, finding out how to protect confidential
information and pass on digital assets is becoming increasingly important -
whether when making a will and appointing executors, or considering attorneys
to act during a period of ill health or other incapacity.
Digital assets include all content, accounts and files
created and stored in a digital form, whether online, in the cloud, or on a
computer or smartphone. These assets may have great financial or sentimental
value.
Obvious examples of assets with a tangible financial value
would be bank, building society or other types of investment accounts, but
could also include gambling accounts, cryptocurrency accounts and internet
payment accounts like PayPal.
Social media accounts, personal photographs and other
personal records and correspondence may only have sentimental value, but in
between, there may be some that have a potential value, such as domain names,
blogs, or affiliate accounts that generate advertising revenue.
As the Yougov research highlighted a common problem
associated with digital assets is that it is not always clear who owns digital
content after death. Often the reason
for this is that users found the detailed terms & conditions too difficult
to understand or so long-winded that they did not read them.
Some digital assets may be only a licence to use services, such as
online music and media supplied through Apple’s iTunes. This sort of licence is personal to the
individual and cannot be transferred to another person.
“Protecting digital assets by making sure your executors
know exactly what you own is becoming increasingly important, so you need to
make sure it’s on the list when it comes to making or updating your will,”
explained Ben Talbot, private client
expert with Gamlins Law. “Physical
assets are relatively easy to identify, but if you don’t provide any record of
assets held online, it’s quite possible they would be overlooked. The other
problem is where access is blocked, which may be because executors don’t have
the log on information or because they don’t have authority to access the
account.”
Some accounts will not allow access by a third party, even if
they are authorised to do so by the account holder, and in this case, it would
be unlawful if executors access the account using the account holder’s log-in
information.
This sort of restriction may be a problem also for attorneys
acting under a power of attorney, whether for a specific purpose or more
generally, under a Lasting Power of Attorney (LPA) for financial affairs. An LPA, which allows an individual to appoint
one or more people to act as their 'attorneys' to help in the management of
their affairs, is common among the elderly or those who are suffering long term
illness, although they are increasingly put in place by younger people who may
need to enable partners or others to act on their behalf while they are away,
for example when travelling for business.
Protecting your digital
assets:
- Make a full listing of all digital assets, including where they are
stored; keep the listing updated regularly and store it securely. This can be alongside your will.
- Make a record of all usernames and passwords, together with the
email address associated with the account, in case it is needed to reset a
password, and store this separately and securely from the full
listing. There are also software
options for secure storage of account details and passwords.
- Never include any personal log-on information or account
information within the will itself, as it becomes a public document once
the Courts issue a Grant of Probate to executors. Similarly, no such information should be
included in a Lasting Power of Attorney as the document must be shared
with institutions and companies when attorneys request authority.
- Assets that have only sentimental value, such as photographs, can
be gifted within your will as personal chattels, to ensure they do not get
overlooked.
- For all online assets, check the small print and find out what
happens to the account on death and then leave guidance to your executors,
including whether you wish any particular accounts to be deleted or held
as memorials.
- Give specific authority to your executors to access and manage all
your digital assets. This should be
in writing and can be included within your will or made in a separate
document that is signed and witnessed.
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note:
This
is not legal advice; it is intended to provide information of general interest
about current legal issues.
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