Privacy in Death: Conserving your Power in Legacy

Privacy in Death: Conserving your Power in Legacy

Gabriel Siwady-Kattan

 

Introduction

Throughout our lives, we store everything online. This means that not only can a person keep physical assets in a bank; they can also have digital assets available online for access and distribution. Who should be able to access those assets when we die? The IRS defines a digital asset as “a digital representation of value recorded on a cryptographically secure distributed ledger or similar technology” and names as examples convertible virtual currency and cryptocurrency, stablecoins, and Non-Fungible Tokens (NFTs).[1] The IRS further elaborates that “[i]f a particular asset has characteristics of a digital asset, [then] it’s treated as one for federal income tax purposes.”[2] Beyond digital assets that have a financial component to them, however, are also images, videos, digital documents, and electronically-stored music. These could be held by any person, and in our modern age, most people have an account where their digital information is stored, whether in an Apple, Google, Facebook, or Instagram account. The existence of digital assets has brought many issues, including how to deal with the distribution of digital assets at the time of death.

To deal with this issue, the Uniform Law Commission (ULC) drafted the Uniform Fiduciary Access to Digital Access Act (hereinafter referred to as the Digital Assets Act).[3] This Act essentially treated digital assets as it would any other kind of traditional property a person held at the time of their death.[4] This meant that an executor had near unsupervised power to access, manage, and distribute a decedent’s digital assets.[5] Under the Digital Assets Act, an executor had the same access to digital assets as an owner had at the time of their death.[6]

Naturally, this “open-access approach” could raise personal privacy concerns. What if, in the process of getting a decedent’s affairs in order, an executor came across communications with a third party? What if that communication shed light on an unknown aspect of the deceased’s life? What if that communication was meant to remain confidential? And what about that third party’s identity?

On top of these personal privacy concerns, the Digital Assets Act’s provisions were contrary to some tech companies’ terms of use agreements. For example, tech companies have their own ways of managing the content on their platform, and often control or limit the agency a user or consumer might have over their own communications. To this end, tech companies almost always require users to agree to a terms of use agreement, which typically includes provisions on how and to whom data may be shared.

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