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Inheritance

What Happens To My Bitcoin When I Die?

05/08/2022 by Idelto Editor

It’s important for Bitcoiners to plan for the unexpected and protect the future of their assets.

This is an opinion editorial by Prasad Prabhakaran, COO and cofounder of HexaWallet.

Over time, an estimated 4 million bitcoin have been lost and are now in inaccessible wallets. It is unknown how many of those coins belonged to HODLers who died without sharing access to their wallets with anyone else.

If you manage your Bitcoin keys, you must devise a strategy for passing on your wealth, or your bitcoin will be lost forever.

Bitcoin inheritance is still poorly understood because most Bitcoin holders are young and, as a result, do not often think about death or inheritance.

As this Cointelegraph article states, “According to a 2020 study by the Cremation Institute, nearly 90% of crypto owners are worried about what will happen to their crypto after they pass away. Furthermore, despite a high level of concern, crypto holders are reportedly four times less likely to use wills for inheritances than non-crypto investors.”

If bitcoin is a new investment for you, it’s crucial to plan for the long term, which includes considering what will happen to your bitcoin after your death.

“If you don’t create a copy of that key and put that key in a safe place where the people that you trust can find it and know what to do with it, then the wealth that you’ve accumulated in crypto is just going to sit there.” — Matthew McClintock, an attorney with a focus on bitcoin estate planning.

What Are The Current Options For Bitcoin Inheritance?

  1. Do nothing.
  2. DIY.
  3. Custodial Exchanges.
  4. Expensive Closed Solutions.
  5. Ill-constructed Cryptocurrency Solutions With Token Incentives.

Do Nothing

Due to its decentralized nature, bitcoin has some special safety issues that don’t apply to assets under the control of a centralized authority. Bitcoin should be seen as a physical item with value, like diamonds, precious metals, or cash, even though it is digital money. Anyone who obtains access to your bitcoin can utilize it, for good or bad. In contrast, your bitcoin will probably be lost forever if you pass away without giving anyone access to your keys.

DIY

One option is DIY storage systems such as the Glacier protocol. These noncommercial alternatives have the distinct advantage of being entirely private. There is no need for anyone to know that the user owns bitcoin or has set up a storage system.

The disadvantage is in usability and guidance. Glacier, for example, took eight hours to set up and four hours to withdraw bitcoin during initial testing according to the official site. Even though practice can cut this time in half, each transaction still takes several hours. Glacier necessitates the purchase of about $600 in equipment and a laborious process that includes modifying laptop hardware, using the command-line interface, installing operating systems, etc.

We are compelled to only marry other tech nerds because it is so technical.

Custodial Exchanges

People’s money is in their own hands thanks to Bitcoin! You don’t need to rely on any financial institution to get your money because you control your private key, and your bitcoin is stored on the public blockchain. Bitcoiners claim to be their own bank or even “self-sovereign” because they have complete control over their currency.

Because of this, a controlled inheritance like that on a custodial exchange undermines the libertarian foundation of Bitcoin. You must trust someone with your financial information if you wish to transfer your bitcoin to someone after your death. If you access bitcoin through an online exchange like Coinbase, you’ve given that company your key and depend on its staff to provide your heir your bitcoin when they ask for it.

Expensive Solutions

Certain organizations permit customers to essentially lock their bitcoin keys inside multiple layers of other private keys, which may then be distributed among other signers. Although this technology is meant to make inheriting bitcoin simpler, it may also lead to more involved processes like beneficiary KYC, etc. Some of these inheritance programs are only accessible to certain customers who are willing to pay exorbitant prices and are only available in specific geographic locations.

Crypto Solution With Token Incentives

“Use DeFi apps to securely manage, store, and transfer your bitcoin … even after you pass away.”

Does this not sound like a scam to you? We’re not that bad, are we?

Summary

Overall, there may be individual variation in how bitcoin HODLers carry out their intentions after their death. While some may opt to entrust institutions with their money and their wills, others may prefer to follow the decentralized route and self-store their money while developing their own succession strategies.

Bitcoin HODLers deserve a better solution to secure bitcoin for loved ones and security shouldn’t come at the cost of privacy. They deserve a solution that is easy to set up and maintain and supports multiple trusted hardware signers in air-gapped and/or multisig manner.

In the end, it’s crucial that users set up a structure that enables their beneficiaries to access their bitcoin assets in the event of their death.

Money that could change your life isn’t truly life-changing if it can’t be put to use.

This is a guest post by Prasad Prabhakaran. Opinions expressed are entirely their own and do not necessarily reflect those of BTC Inc. or Bitcoin Magazine.

Filed Under: Bitcoin Magazine, culture, custody, English, Inheritance, Opinion, private keys

Russian ‘Time Capsule’ to Facilitate Inheritance of Crypto Assets

29/07/2021 by Idelto Editor

Russian ‘Time Capsule’ to Facilitate Inheritance of Crypto Assets

Researchers in Moscow are developing a new service that will allow users to transfer digital data to their heirs, including crypto keys. The Russian “time capsule” will be capable of storing and relaying other private information as well such as a record of the whereabouts of valuable items.

Russian Universities to Provide Service Allowing Crypto Investors to Secure the Future of Their Coins

Experts from three Russian universities – Lomonosov Moscow State University, National Research Nuclear University, and Moscow State Institute of International Relations – are working to give crypto holders the peace of mind that their digital assets will not be lost after their death. The service will be based on blockchain technology, RIA Novosti reported quoting Russia’s National Technology Initiative Platform.

The joint team is now creating a website through which people will be able to store the precious information, encrypted and ready to be transferred to the possession of specified persons, the project manager Dmitry Izvekov explained. This can happen only after certain conditions are met and not earlier than six months after the data has been uploaded. The report further details:

[The service] will allow you to securely store digital data and assets – from passwords for social networks to keys to bitcoin wallets.

Subscribers will be able to use the Russian time capsule to also keep photographs, text files, video messages, and even location details for valuable items that can be passed on to heirs in case of an unexpected death, for example. A user will have to send a link to a chosen recipient who must set up their own account in order to gain access to the information. The time capsule will open only on a pre-specified date in the future.

The encrypted data will be stored on Sbercloud, a cloud service developed by one of Russia’s largest banks, Sberbank, and backed up on Dropbox and other platforms. Each user will be allowed to send two capsules free of charge. The creators hope to raise up to 3 million rubles (around $40,000) to finance the project, monetize the service as soon as it gains popularity and offer additional services.

According to a survey conducted last year by the Cremation Institute in the U.S., which has been quoted by the Russian business news portal RBC, 89% of crypto investors worry about what will happen to their assets after they die. Yet, despite concerns that the coins can be lost forever, only 23% of cryptocurrency holders have a plan for their digital money after they pass away.

What do you think about the time capsule service for crypto holders that’s under development in Russia? Share your thoughts on the subject in the comments section below.

Filed Under: cloud services, Coins, crypto, crypto assets, crypto holders, Crypto investors, Cryptocurrencies, cryptocurrency, Digital assets, digital coins, Digital Currencies, English, heirs, inherit, Inheritance, Moscow, News Bitcoin, Researchers, Russia, russian, service, technology, time capsule, universities

Protecting Your HODL Legacy: Shamir Backups And Inheritance Planning

21/07/2021 by Idelto Editor

Awareness of one’s own mortality is a sign of maturity, as is the recognition of the critical importance of securing one’s bitcoin.

At the height of the 2017 bull run, I came across a sobering post. It went something like this: there was a young man who acquired about 20 bitcoin early on. As the price went from $1,000 to almost $20,000 over the course of 2017, he felt rich beyond his wildest dreams and decided to travel a bit. At one point he was in Mexico in a nice hotel and partied by a rooftop pool. Things got out of hand, then he fell down to the street below and died. The author of this particular post was a friend of the man’s family and wanted to find out if there was any way to access the bitcoin. However, the young man used a passphrase-protected Trezor and hadn’t written the passphrase down anywhere. The bitcoin was thus lost along with the man’s life.

Bitcoin is a bearer instrument, meaning that it’s not sufficient for your survivors to be aware of your stack – they have to be able to access the keys. On the other hand, you don’t necessarily want your family having access to your bitcoin while you’re still alive. So there needs to be some sort of backup plan allowing for access management. Shamir backup allows precisely for this use case.

But before we get to the details of how Shamir backup works, let’s have a brief recap of what seed backups are.

Seed Backup

In the humble beginnings of Bitcoin, it was a challenge to do backups properly. Before the invention of deterministic wallets, all the individual private keys had to be backed up, which could be hundreds of keys. Unsurprisingly, many bitcoin were lost due to this clunky backup process. In 2012, Pieter Wuille came up with the clever invention of Hierarchical Deterministic Wallets (HD wallets, standardized by BIP32) that made backups much easier – users now had to secure only one master seed, from which the individual private keys were then generated. A year later, BIP39 standardized the mnemonic seed – a group of words in particular order that fulfill the role of HD wallet backup. With mnemonic seed, backups became much easier, as there is little room for error when writing down ordinary words, as compared to writing down a random string of letters and numbers.

So nowadays you don’t actually back up your private key as such, but rather the recovery seed — usually in the form of 12 or 24 words in particular order. You may lose your phone or break your hardware wallet, but you will still be able to access your bitcoin if you have the recovery seed safely stored away.

Storing the recovery seed safely is the tricky part. We have to protect the seed from the following two risks:

  • theft – the recovery seed has to be protected against misuse by strangers;
  • loss – your bitcoin wealth shouldn’t depend on a single copy of the recovery seed, so that in case of an accident (flood, fire, etc.) you don’t lose your bitcoin.

While the risk of theft calls for as few copies as possible — preferably just one at your home — the risk of loss calls for the opposite. Having just one copy of your recovery seed is literally playing with fire. So you need to have several copies in a multitude of physical locations – but you need to be sure these won’t be misused even if found by a stranger. A plain recovery seed based on a single word list cannot meet this criteria.

Enter Shamir

Shamir’s secret sharing (SSS) is a cryptographic technique formulated in 1979 by the Israeli cryptographer Adi Shamir. The essence of Shamir’s scheme lies in the ability to back up, share and recover a secret through breaking up the secret into multiple shares that are individually useless and leak no information about the secret or the scheme setup.

There are two important parameters relevant to SSS: shares, or how many parts of the secret there are; and threshold, or how many shares we need to combine to recover the secret.

For example, a “3 out of 5 Shamir backup” means that the user created five shares when setting up the scheme and the threshold requirement to access the original secret is three shares. It doesn’t matter which three shares are used to recover the secret.

This means that Alice can back up her seed for example in the following way (assuming the 3 out of 5 Shamir backup):

  • two shares at her home
  • one share at a close friend’s house
  • one share at her mom’s house
  • one share in the bank safe deposit box

Of course the individual shares are in an analog form – written by hand on paper or stamped into a sheet of metal (using Cryptosteel, Cryptotag, or other similar solutions). Alice is well aware that she should never write down the shares on an internet-connected computer or keep a digital copy.

With this arrangement in place, Alice doesn’t have to worry about losing access to her bitcoin even if her house burns down, because she can regain access to it by collecting the remaining shares from her friend, her mother and the safe deposit box. She also doesn’t need to worry about theft because no single location meets the necessary threshold to access the coins.

Shamir’s secret sharing is thus a perfect solution to the theft/loss conundrum, as the isolated shares are useless by themselves, and Alice can even lose some of the shares without losing access to her bitcoin.

The original Shamir scheme has been around since 1979, but was only properly standardized for use in seed backups in late 2017. The standard is called SLIP-0039 : Shamir’s Secret-Sharing for Mnemonic Codes and is fully open for anyone to study, share and implement in their products.

Shamir backups based on SLIP-39 are used by Trezor (Model T), Unchained Capital’s Hermit wallet, and others have also started to adopt the standard.

Inheritance Planning Using Shamir Backup

The same qualities that make Shamir backup powerful for everyday security also make it suitable for inheritance planning. When Alice has her recovery shares distributed as outlined above, the only thing she needs to do to ensure succession is to write down clear guidance for her survivors.

Now this may sound easy, but writing down the inheritance guide should be done with proper care. Here are the crucial dos and don’ts:

  • don’t just tell your loved one about the Shamir scheme, write it down; if you only told someone, they would probably forget the details (or in the worst case scenario, the individual can die along with you in some accident);
  • write the guide using pen and paper; never type it on your computer, never keep a digital copy;
  • explain what Shamir backup is in the first place, and why the recovery should be carried out with utmost care (e.g. the shares should never be typed into a website, never sent to strangers “trying to help” over the internet);
  • describe the total amount of shares, the threshold, and instructions for uncovering the locations of the shares;
  • store the inheritance guide in a secure, controlled site that can be accessed by your loved ones in case of your death; your home safe may work the best, though the appropriate site depends on individual circumstances;
  • do not make the bitcoin inheritance guide part of your last will – this may put the survivors in danger, as the last will is a publicly accessible document in some jurisdictions;
  • update the inheritance guide should something change (e.g. the location of the shares);

And of course, if you have some bitcoin on hot wallets, exchange accounts or other services, you should inform your survivors about these too. Ideally, every single satoshi should be accessible by your loved ones in case something happens to you.

But perhaps the most important piece of advice is to put yourself in the shoes of a nocoiner. Because if your whole family isn’t sufficiently orange-pilled, chances are they will make fatal mistakes if they’re confused. So try to be as clear as possible about what you’ve left behind and how to access it safely, without falling prey to scammers, phishing attempts and so on. Consider recommending a trusted bitcoiner friend to help your family out. Be very careful with whom you recommend, but also know that if you don’t recommend anyone to your family, they may reach out to strangers on the internet. And even if your friend won’t prove himself as trustworthy as you thought, your family will have legal recourse against a known person, which wouldn’t be the case if they were scammed by a stranger.

Shamir Or Multisig?

Not everyone is a fan of Shamir backups. Some time ago, Jameson Lopp (Casa) wrote an analysis of the supposed Shamir shortcomings and recommended multisig optionsinstead. Lopp’s analysis is fair and should be addressed here.

First of all, it’s true the previous attempts at Shamir’s scheme for use in seed backups were sloppy, as Lopp pointed out. It’s a different matter with SLIP39, though. The standard was written in late 2017, but implemented in the Trezor wallet only in the summer of 2019. No vulnerability has been found in the two years before the first real-world implementation, neither in the two years following. And there is none, as the math behind the SLIP39 is simply correct. If it wasn’t, a vulnerability would have been found years ago.

Furthermore, Shamir backups and multisigs solve a slightly different use case. Shamir backups solve the problem of protecting the recovery seed. Multisigs offer enhanced security when transacting. The two can actually be combined: you can have a multisig scheme, where the recovery seed of each individual wallet is protected via Shamir backups.

Both multisig and Shamir backups rely on the physical remoteness of the elements (signing parties or Shamir shares) for their security. Setting up and using both plans is thus time consuming.

For Shamir, this isn’t such a problem, as you usually need to deal with your seed only when setting up your wallet and later on when performing a recovery (which can be years down the road).

For multisig schemes, users are faced with a practical coordination problem, as you depend on active, ongoing participation of physically remote parties whenever you need to sign transactions — which can be several times a month if not more often. While this is doable for formal organizations like hedge funds or corporations, it’s quite unworkable for individuals — unless they pay a third party who offers such service as their business.

The coordination problem can be mitigated by choosing a multisig setup where users hold the necessary threshold (e.g. 2-of-5) in their own home. Such a setup is more practical than the one where all the keys are physically distributed, but eliminates one of the advantages of multisigs – the inability to transact under duress. But to be fair, Shamir by itself also doesn’t protect against physical attack scenarios such as home intrusion, if the user has her Trezor set up and immediately available.

Multisigs still have many pitfalls when it comes to transaction verification and backing up the whole setup. These will hopefully be resolved with widely accepted industry standards in the future, but until that happens, they aren’t really usable for ordinary, non-technical hodlers. Shamir backups are usable and practical today.

—

Shamir backups are effective at preventing both theft and loss. They are also a smart way to pass bitcoin on for inheritance. In addition to creating the Shamir backup itself, inheritance planning requires clear written instructions for survivors. Shamir can be used in a multisig or on its own and is a practical solution to increase the level of security without the need for multiple wallets.

This is a guest post by Josef Tětek. Opinions expressed are entirely their own and do not necessarily reflect those of BTC, Inc. or Bitcoin Magazine.

Filed Under: adi shamir, Bitcoin Magazine, Cryptography, English, Inheritance, private keys, security, shamir backups, technical

Send Token Payouts With Ease Using Bitcoin.com’s SLP Dividend Calculator

25/08/2019 by Idelto Editor

On August 23, Bitcoin.com released a new application called the SLP Dividend Calculator. The new platform allows users to build a transaction to make dividend payments to any Simple Ledger Protocol (SLP) token holder.

Also read: How to Create Non-Fungible Assets and Collectible Tokens With Bitcoin Cash

Testing the New SLP Dividend Calculator From Bitcoin.com

Over the last year, SLP tokens have been extremely popular among BCH proponents, and so far supporters have made thousands of unique coins on the BCH chain. As time has progressed, the SLP ecosystem has matured a great deal and there are many third-party solutions supporting the token infrastructure. This week, Bitcoin.com added a new platform to our Tools.Bitcoin.com portal called the SLP Dividend Calculator. The application provides users with the ability to make grouped dividend payments to specific SLP token holders. For instance, if you distributed fractions of an SLP token to a group of three people, then you could enter the token’s ID and send funds to all three holders at a specific point in time. With the ability to pay BCH dividend payments to SLP token holders, the new tool opens the door to all kinds of real-world use cases.

Send Token Payouts With Ease Using Bitcoin.com's SLP Dividend Calculator
To use the new Bitcoin.com SLP Dividend Calculator simply add an SLP Token ID, the desired dividend payment in BCH, and when you want the payment to be sent. After you are happy with the customization, press “Build Tx” to start the process.

After the new tool was released, I decided to test the service in order to highlight just how easy it is to use the new Bitcoin.com SLP Dividend Calculator. I tested the app with my cousin, Andrew Brow, because back in June I sent him some custom SLP tokens called “Andy Coin (ABC)” just to show him how simple it is to create tokens. At the time I created 21 million ABC coins and sent 10 million to my cousin’s Badger wallet. Last night I opened up the SLP Dividend Calculator and pasted the token’s unique ID number into the first window.

Sent an SLP dividend payment flawlessly just now. Sent the funds and paid the unique payment code that said “Paying 0.003176 #BCH to holders of SLP Token ID…” It paid perfectly splitting the funds between addresses, confirming in 1 block. Was also a Schnorr transaction. 👏 pic.twitter.com/CnpIpjrB2g

— Jamie Redman (@jamieCrypto) August 24, 2019

Then I decided to pay $1 to the Andy Coin token holders, which means it will be split in half between both of us, because we are both ABC token holders. The SLP Dividend Calculator can pay a lot more than just two addresses, but for this test two was enough. After making sure the SLP token ID and the number of funds I wanted to send were correct, I decided to make the funds available at the last confirmed block height. You can also choose to broadcast it as is in the latest mempool state or you can choose a custom block height as well.

Send Token Payouts With Ease Using Bitcoin.com's SLP Dividend Calculator
After the dividend transaction is built the tool will display all the specifications tied to the payment alongside a QR BCH invoice that uses a unique Pay.Bitcoin.com URI. You can use the Bitcoin.com Wallet to pay the invoice or you can use any wallet that supports Bitcoin Payment Protocol for payments.

The service gives you two choices after the customization is complete: you can either press the button “Start over” or “Build the transaction.” After I chose to build the transaction, the application showed me exactly what would happen after I paid the unique payment invoice. The SLP balances were scanned at block height 597121 and I sent a dividend payment of 0.003176 BCH, which would be paid to the token holders of the Andy Coin token ID number. The platform also told me that two addresses would receive a BCH dividend payment after I paid the QR invoice code through Pay.Bitcoin.com. Any wallet that supports invoices, like the Bitcoin.com Wallet, can pay the invoice by copying the URI scheme or scanning the QR code. I used the Electron Cash wallet to pay the invoice, because I had some available funds in the wallet and I wanted to see exactly how the transaction was built and executed from the client perspective.

Send Token Payouts With Ease Using Bitcoin.com's SLP Dividend Calculator
The Pay.Bitcoin.com invoice can be paid using a wallet that supports invoice payment features like the Bitcoin.com Wallet and Electron Cash.

Opening the Door to a Decentralized Stock Market, Trust Payments and Bearer Bonds

After paying the invoice, the transaction broadcasted and my cousin Andrew and I were both sent $0.50 in BCH each. The transactions confirmed in the following block and the entire test can be seen on Bitcoin.com’s Block Explorer or Simpleledger.info as well. The tool could be used for a variety of interesting dividend payment ideas. For instance, Bitcoin.com’s executive chairman, Roger Ver, recently sent BCH dividend payments to Cashgames.Bitcoin.com Dividend Test Token (CGT) holders for being Cashgames.Bitcoin.com patrons.

Send Token Payouts With Ease Using Bitcoin.com's SLP Dividend Calculator
After pasting the URI code into the Electron Cash wallet you can then choose to execute the dividend payment.

A person with four children could create four separate non-fungible (NFT1) tokens with the kids’ names attached to them and call them Trust Tokens. After a specific block height, the Trust Tokens can be sent a BCH dividend payment in order to leave an inheritance to the children. Or a business could have people invest in the company by initiating an initial coin offering (ICO) and token holders could reap the profits in the form of dividend payments over time.

Send Token Payouts With Ease Using Bitcoin.com's SLP Dividend Calculator
The Electron Cash wallet shows you the specific details of the dividend transaction.

The sky’s the limit when it comes to the variety of concepts that can derive from people using the Bitcoin.com SLP Dividend Calculator. Since the application was launched, a bunch of BCH supporters have tested the platform to send funds to certain token holders. “Fantastic,” one BCH enthusiast wrote on the Reddit forum r/btc. “[This] gives us decentralized stock market… dead easy to use.”

Send Token Payouts With Ease Using Bitcoin.com's SLP Dividend Calculator
This my transaction sending a dollar’s worth of BCH to my cousin’s address and my address.

“Holy crap the new SLP dividend tool is awesome. Just played around with it and sent all holders of the MIS token their share of .01 BCH just to test it out,” another BCH user said on Twitter. “This is magic internet money for reals.” If you have created SLP tokens you can try sending a dividend payment to token holders by using the SLP Dividend Calculator. The process takes less than two minutes to complete and you don’t need to be a tech wiz to use the new tool. Check out the platform at Tools.Bitcoin.com and send your first BCH dividend payment today.

What do you think about the new SLP Dividend Calculator? Let us know what you think about this new tool and concept in the comments section below.


Image credits: Shutterstock, Electron Cash, SLP Dividend Calculator, Pixabay, Bitcoin.com’s Block Explorer and Wiki Commons.


Do you need to track down a Bitcoin transaction? With our Block Explorer tool, you can search by transaction ID, address, or block hash to find specific details. You can also search for SLP token transactions on the Bitcoin.com Block Explorer as well.

The post Send Token Payouts With Ease Using Bitcoin.com’s SLP Dividend Calculator appeared first on Bitcoin News.

Filed Under: ABC, Andre the Giant, Andrew Brow, Andy Coin, autonomous, BCH, BCH payments, Bearer Bond Payments, Bitcoin Cash, cashgames, Cashgames.Bitcoin.com Dividend Test Token, cryptocurrency, Decentralized Stock Market, Developers, Digital assets, Digital Inheritance, Dividend, Engineers, English, Inheritance, Innovation, News Bitcoin, Reddit, Roger Ver, SLP, SLP Dividend Calculator, SLP Token Payments, SLP tokens, tech, technology, Testing, Tools.Bitcoin.com, trust token, Twitter

How to Bequeath Your Digital Assets to Your Descendants

20/08/2019 by Idelto Editor

How to Bequeath Your Digital Assets to Your Descendants

Depending on your belief system, death is either the endgame or the next level. Whatever lies on the other side, your bitcoins are no good there. Just as we entered this world with nothing, we are destined to leave it with nothing. All those years spent stacking sats needn’t be in vain, however. New and improved tools have made it easier to bequeath your crypto to your next of kin.

Also read: As US Expands Subprime Mortgage Program, Is a New Crisis Looming?

Digital Inheritance Demands Modern Solutions

According to John Milton, “Death is the golden key that opens the palace of eternity.” That may be, but that key won’t unlock your crypto wallet when you’re gone. It’s a task that calls for a private key – a 256-bit number that enables your coins to be spent. You could just hand a copy of this key to your next of kin, or leave it in a safe deposit box with strict instructions for the executor of your estate, but to do so would be to place your trust in the goodwill and competence of others. Safe deposit boxes aren’t safe at all, while family can’t necessarily be relied on to resist touching your tokens until the appointed time.

How to Bequeath Your Digital Assets to Your Descendants

The solution, for a growing number of cryptocurrency users, has been to utilize purpose-built digital inheritance software that promises to automate the process on your behalf. TrustVerse is a protocol for handling digital assets, including the management and ownership of digital identities. Pluto is its legacy planning service for cryptocurrency owners. After selecting an inheritance design that dictates the conditions under which the assets can be bequeathed, a smart contract is set up to administer the process. Should the owner pass away suddenly, the inheritor can submit a certificate of death to gain access to the assets locked into Pluto’s smart contract. There are also provisions to cover multiple beneficiaries, who must reach consensus before funds can be unlocked.

Other Ways to Bequeath Your Crypto

The crypto space is surprisingly light on other turnkey digital inheritance solutions. Safe Haven appears close to finally shipping its product. It allows you to add a verified legal entity to your inheritance plan, but there is also the option to enable a fully automated solution that uses smart contracts to trigger a so-called dead man’s switch after a certain period of time.

Similar technology is utilized in Last Will, a BCH inheritance solution that news.Bitcoin.com covered in April. It too contains a dead man’s switch with a six-month trigger that will make the coins available to the inheritor unless the owner refreshes the Last Will agreement. It’s not a foolproof solution by any means, but it’s an effective way of preparing for the unexpected. If you’re planning a solo trek to the North Pole, locking your coins into Last Will might make sense. It also benefits from being a fully non-custodial solution, whose code can be inspected on Github. The value of a decentralized inheritance solution is significant: one project that sought to tackle this challenge, Digipulse, died before anyone could use it.

How to Bequeath Your Digital Assets to Your Descendants

Italian startup Crypto360 has devised a secure off-chain back-up service for wallet seeds and private keys that’s specifically designed for digital inheritance. Its website doesn’t exactly inspire confidence, however, and bitcoiners may conclude that they would be better off stashing a hardware wallet in a safe place and leaving instructions to its whereabouts in a sealed will.

Crypto and Inheritance Tax

Where there’s death, there’s taxes, and crypto assets are no exception. In both the U.K. and the U.S., cryptocurrency is treated as property, which means inheritance tax is technically due on any digital currencies your descendants receive.

Koinly founder Robin Singh told news.Bitcoin.com: “Crypto is basically property, so the inheritance tax applies but the tax-free limit for it is so high that very few people are ever going to be hit by it. It’s been dubbed the ‘Paris Hilton tax’ for a reason.” The tax software specialist is referring to America’s inheritance tax which is only due on estates worth more than $5.4 million. As a result, only 0.2% of U.S. estates are estimated to be liable for the tax. Unless you’ve been building up bitcoin since 2011, you’re probably excused.

How to Bequeath Your Digital Assets to Your Descendants

Take Care of Your Crypto and Your Crypto Will Care of You and Yours

Bitcoin is self-sovereign money. It demands that its owner takes action to preserve it, without the safety net of state-built protections in the event of loss through theft or carelessness. As a result, most cryptocurrency owners are already proactive when it comes to safeguarding their assets. Caring for the things you hold dear extends this obligation to finding a way to pass them on to your nearest and dearest when the time comes.

Planning for the worst while hoping for the best means ensuring there’s a way for your heirs to inherit your digital assets without being forced to guess passwords, piece together recovery phrases, or track down 2FA codes. Making your crypto secure enough to survive this life, while making it easily transferable once you pass on to the next life is harder than it sounds. Get it right, though, and you can relax in the knowledge that your coin-accumulating efforts won’t be in vain – whatever the future may hold.

How to Bequeath Your Digital Assets to Your Descendants
Hal Finney

As Hal Finney wrote, a little over a year before his death in 2014:

Discussions about inheriting your bitcoins are of more than academic interest. My bitcoins are stored in our safe deposit box, and my son and daughter are tech savvy. I think they’re safe enough. I’m comfortable with my legacy.

What do you think is the most effective method for handling digital inheritance? Let us know in the comments section below.


Images courtesy of Shutterstock.


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The post How to Bequeath Your Digital Assets to Your Descendants appeared first on Bitcoin News.

Filed Under: bequeath, bitcoin will, Digital Inheritance, English, Featured, Hal Finney, Inheritance, Last Will, News Bitcoin, Will

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