Digital assets could be lost to heirs unless they are part of an estate plan
Make Sure You Know Who Will Inherit Your Twitter Account
Digital assets could be lost to heirs unless they are part of an estate plan
- ( Wall Street Journal ) -
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424127887324577904578557572448026196.html?mod=e2fb
Who gets access to your Facebook, Google and Twitter accounts after you die? The WSJ's Eva Tam finds out.
People draft estate plans that carefully detail how their money and property should pass to their heirs after they become incapacitated or die.
Questions like these are popping up with more frequency—and for good reason. A popular blog or Web domain, for example, can have great, or potential, value as a business. But if the owner doesn't take the proper legal steps ahead of time, their heirs may lose the rights to those assets. Photos, videos, email and contents of social-media accounts also may be lost.
Make a List
Justin T. Miller, national wealth strategist in the San Francisco office of BNY Mellon Wealth Management, a division of Bank of New York Mellon Corp., BK -0.96% says that clients often react with surprise when advisers ask about their plans for passing on things like online financial and social-media accounts. Even the technology executives he counsels, Mr. Miller says, have given little thought to how to provide their heirs with access to some of their online assets.Katherine Dean, managing director of wealth planning for Wells Fargo Private Bank, San Francisco, says one couple worth around $20 million seemed abashed when she asked them to detail their digital assets in making a comprehensive financial and estate plan. She gave them a one-page checklist seeking information about such assets as photo and social-media accounts, Web-based games, and online-only banking and brokerage accounts.
"They said, 'Oh my gosh, we've got to go online to get this,' " says Ms. Dean. "Whenever we hear that, we take the time to have the conversation that this is very important."
The most important thing, estate attorneys say, is to establish procedures for protecting and granting access to passwords and for transferring assets and account ownership. The rules can vary widely depending on the vendor. While there is nothing in Twitter's company rules and conditions that says one of its accounts must close if the owner dies, Apple Inc.'s AAPL +1.64% iTunes says it doesn't have a policy that allows anyone to will or inherit an iTunes account.
But even where limits exist, by placing the license and necessary passwords in a trust, access to such accounts can be preserved, says Naomi R. Cahn, a professor at George Washington University Law School.
Wills play an important role, too, Ms. Cahn says, mainly in stating who should receive any digital property that is capable of being inherited. A will can also designate who will have access to digital accounts, although this may not be legally binding.
Estate advisers caution against listing digital assets and passwords in a will because the will can become public. Such information instead should go into a separate letter, says Lesley Moss, an attorney at law firm Oram & Moss in Chevy Chase, Md.
Looking for Legislation
A group of states is interested in drafting a law that would make it easier for consumers to bequeath online property by giving fiduciaries the right to manage and distribute their clients' digital assets.Lawyers, judges, legislators and law professors from the Uniform Law Commission, a group appointed by state governments to draft and promote new state laws, met this summer to discuss such a proposal.
Currently only Connecticut, Idaho, Indiana, Oklahoma and Rhode Island give fiduciaries this right.
Ms. Dale is a reporter for The Wall Street Journal. She can be reached atarden.dale@wsj.com.
A version of this article appeared September 19, 2013, on page R3 in the U.S. edition of The Wall Street Journal, with the headline: Make Sure You Know Who Will Inherit Your Twitter Account.
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