Showing posts with label Digital Assets. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Digital Assets. Show all posts

30 August 2016

Digital Estate Planning Laws -- Relevant to Preserving "Your" Digital Genealogy Assets!


Digital Estate Planning Laws -- Relevant to Preserving "Your" Digital Genealogy Assets!

What’s the saying? “‘Tis impossible to be sure of any thing but Death and Taxes,”1

Though we do often talk of taxes as invaluable records, this post addresses the concept of death and whether or not you have addressed what becomes of your social media accounts, emails, cloud-based content, ebooks, digital music, web-based family trees, DNA test results, and much more?

Let’s face it – we will all die and we do want to ensure that all that we’ve accumulated digitally will survive us and be available to our descendants.

Earlier this year, Dick Eastman posted Michigan Defines Who Owns Digital Assets After Death which led me to the website Everplans.com which has an incredibly useful page, State-by-State Digital Estate Planning Laws.  As of this writing, only “19 states have stepped in to create laws that will protect people's digital assets and give the person's family the right to access and manage those accounts after the owner has died.”

The Uniform Law Commission is tracking the implementation of the Fiduciary Access to Digital Assets Act, Revised (2015) which shows the 19 states which have enacted such legislation and 12 additional states which have introduced the legislation.

This act extends the traditional power of a fiduciary to manage tangible property to include management of a person’s digital assets. The act allows fiduciaries to manage digital property like computer files, web domains, and virtual currency, but restricts a fiduciary’s access to electronic communications such as email, text messages, and social media accounts unless the original user consented in a will, trust, power of attorney, or other record.

Check the applicable laws for the state in which you live.  You might need to provide explicit instructions in your will.  Many often provide their usernames and passwords to loved ones in advance to provide unfettered access. Again, check the applicable laws for the state in which you live and the user agreements of the relevant service providers.

You’d hate to see your hard genealogical work “frozen” in a form of legal limbo.  Plan now for the inevitable!


What steps have you taken to ensure that your family history research related files are properly managed upon your death?


1 Death and taxes (idiom)








~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
copyright © National Genealogical Society, 3108 Columbia Pike, Suite 300, Arlington, Virginia 22204-4370. http://www.ngsgenealogy.org.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
NGS does not imply endorsement of any outside advertiser or other vendors appearing in this blog. Any opinions expressed by guest authors are their own and do not necessarily reflect the view of NGS.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 
Republication of UpFront articles is permitted and encouraged for non-commercial purposes without express permission from NGS. Please drop us a note telling us where and when you are using the article. Express written permission is required if you wish to republish UpFront articles for commercial purposes. You may send a request for express written permission to UpFront@ngsgenealogy.org. All republished articles may not be edited or reworded and must contain the copyright statement found at the bottom of each UpFront article.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Think your friends, colleagues, or fellow genealogy researchers would find this blog post interesting? If so, please let them know that anyone can read past UpFront with NGS posts or subscribe!
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Suggestions for topics for future UpFront with NGS posts are always welcome. Please send any suggested topics to UpfrontNGS@mosaicrpm.com
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Unless indicated otherwise or clearly an NGS Public Relations piece, Upfront with NGS posts are written by Diane L Richard, editor, Upfront with NGS.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Want to learn more about interacting with the blog, please read Hyperlinks, Subscribing and Comments -- How to Interact with Upfront with NGS Blog posts!
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Follow NGS via Facebook, Flipboard, Google+, Twitter, YouTube

25 April 2013

After a death, Facebook photos could fade forever ... or, issues with digital assets, ownership and access

Used via Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 2.0 Generic License, http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/2.0/


In the past, though heirs might squabble over the photo albums, family journals, photo albums, etc, someone always got this stuff.  They might not have shared it and someone at least had it.  This of course assumes that the family members did care and it didn’t end up in a dumpster.  We all have those kinds of tales to tell.

Now, in our age of Facebook (FB), MySpace, Google+, Instagram, Pinterest, and numerous other social media options, NO-ONE is guaranteed to get access to all the stories, images and much more which is now posted to the web and maybe not ever stored anywhere else.

The heart-breaking story told in After a death, Facebook photos could fade forever could be faced by any of us.

Currently, the best way to handle this is to know the law (state and federal) and be pro-active.  For example, I regularly check out the FB pages of my extended family and make copies of any images that they have posted.  This way, if their account is every closed for any reason, I will still have those images.


Are there steps that you take to “preserve” anything you or others have posted on the web?

Do you actively save/archive any posted material – stories, images, etc?


Two recent Upfront with NGS posts on related topics are:




~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
copyright © National Genealogical Society, 3108 Columbia Pike, Suite 300, Arlington, Virginia 22204-4370. http://www.ngsgenealogy.org.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Want to learn more about interacting with the blog, please read Hyperlinks, Subscribing and Comments -- How to Interact with Upfront with NGS Blog posts!
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
NGS does not imply endorsement of any outside advertiser or other vendors appearing in this blog.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 
Republication of UpFront articles is permitted and encouraged for non-commercial purposes without express permission from NGS. Please drop us a note telling us where and when you are using the article. Express written permission is required if you wish to republish UpFront articles for commercial purposes. You may send a request for express written permission to UpFront@ngsgenealogy.org. All republished articles may not be edited or reworded and must contain the copyright statement found at the bottom of each UpFront article.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Follow NGS via Facebook, YouTube, Google+, Twitter
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Think your friends, colleagues, or fellow genealogy researchers would find this blog post interesting? If so, please let them know that anyone can read past UpFront with NGS posts or subscribe!
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Suggestions for topics for future UpFront with NGS posts are always welcome. Please send any suggested topics to UpfrontNGS@mosaicrpm.com

07 December 2012

If You Can’t Open It, You Don’t Own It -- E-book Licensing Restrictions

Image Source: http://previewnetworks.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/2012/03/digital-assets.jpg


A post by this title was published on The Signal: Digital Preservation blog of the Library of Congress.  It is a very important topic for genealogists.  As more and more resource material gets published in e-format, what are the limitations on sharing, bequeathing, etc this wonderful library we may have accumulated?  I remember when music first became digital, I let my husband deal with all the issues of Digital Rights Management (DRM) stuff as it just gave me one big headache!  

I love that when I have a book or a CD or a DVD, I can share it with my family or loan it out to friends.  I have quickly learned that this is frequently NOT true with digital items (e.g. book, music, movies, etc).  If we try to share out “digital” collections – it might be considered illegal!  Ack, I don’t want to do anything illegal and yet if I’ve “paid” for something, I want to ultimately be able to pass it along to someone else to enjoy!

And, as more and more of our personal “stuff” becomes digitized, we are also digitizing or accessing digitized documents, books, lectures, videos, etc that are part of our “library,” though in digital format.  What happens to those when we die or want to “share” them with our family?!?!?!

Leslie Johnston reflects on a talk given where these topics were recently addressed ...

On October 17, I had the extreme pleasure of hearing Cory Doctorow at the Library for talk entitled “A Digital Shift: Libraries, Ebooks and Beyond.”  Not surprisingly, the room was packed with attentive listeners.

The talk covered a wide range of topics–his love of books as physical objects and his background working in libraries and as a bookseller; his opinion on Fair Use under U.S. Copyright law; and his oft-discussed release of his own works as free ebooks under a Creative Common license in conjunction with their physical publication.

But the focus of his passion was the prevalent publishing and ownership model for ebooks.

When you buy a physical book, said Doctorow, you own that book.  You can lend it to friends, give it away, or even sell it.  But when you buy an ebook, you license it.  Depending upon the source you purchased an ebook from, you may only have the right/ability to read it on a single device or type of device.  It often comes with Digital Rights Management attached, he noted, so you cannot make any changes that will allow you to read your ebook on other devices or loan it or transfer it to someone else. You can’t even save it and open it independently of its original intended environment.

“If you can’t open it, you don’t own it,” he declared.


A related opinion piece by Gary Richmond “Die Hard--But Make Sure You Can Bequeath Your Digital Assets” also explores these topics.



Have you purchased a print book instead of an e-book just because of issues like these?  Or what about a CD vs some mp3s or a DVD versus a purchase via Amazon Prime?  Are there times where you consciously made a genealogy-related purchase decision to ensure that you could bequeath or share “it?”  If so, please let us know




~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
copyright © National Genealogical Society, 3108 Columbia Pike, Suite 300, Arlington, Virginia 22204-4370. http://www.ngsgenealogy.org.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
NGS does not imply endorsement of any outside advertiser or other vendors appearing in this blog.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 
Republication of UpFront articles is permitted and encouraged for non-commercial purposes without express permission from NGS. Please drop us a note telling us where and when you are using the article. Express written permission is required if you wish to republish UpFront articles for commercial purposes. You may send a request for express written permission to UpFront@ngsgenealogy.org. All republished articles may not be edited or reworded and must contain the copyright statement found at the bottom of each UpFront article.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Follow NGS via Facebook, YouTube, Google+, Twitter
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Think your friends, colleagues, or fellow genealogy researchers would find this blog post interesting? If so, please let them know that anyone can read past UpFront with NGS posts or subscribe!
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Suggestions for topics for future UpFront with NGS posts are always welcome. Please send any suggested topics to UpfrontNGS@mosaicrpm.com