Monday, 27 October 2014

The Concept of Digital Inheritance in Cyberspace

The Concept of Digital Inheritance in Cyberspace

By

S J Tubrazy



Abstract:
Digital inheritance is getting weigh with emergence if social media interaction and getting huge valuable data stored in cloud computing. In fact it does furtherance the expectancy of passing over digital assets to legal heirs. Digital data includes passwords, digital contracts, credit card numbers, online bank accounts, digital receipts, pictures, etc.

Subject may be new; nevertheless, the concept is ancient one, the universal succession 1 given by the Roman law 2 which means that in inheritance law the heirs enter into the legal position regarding property rights of the testator by law. Digital Inheritance 3 means, “electronic virtual assets belong to an individual that are transferred upon his/her death to a designed heir” these virtual assets typically available in defined cyberspace world 4. Digital objects 5 usually refer as  data sets that can be inherited can include passwords, websites, documents, online gaming IDs, social media accounts and emails, digital contracts, digital receipts, digital graphics, or anything else that a user has access to primarily digitally.
·         Deceased User Policy:
There is still need to have uniform deceased user’s policy 6 for electronic medias regulated in cyberspace. Different social medias have different deceased user’s policies like twitter does not allow to access the deceased user profile account 7. They deactivate the deceased user account if someone verified them about the user’s death or provide them the user’s death certificate. Facebook also deletes a deceased user's profile if verified by family member.
·         Legal analysis:
Under the concept of universal secession 9 digital inheritance requires digital data takes part of the descendant's estate wherein heirs enter into the legal position regarding property rights of the testator by law. Subjective rights 10 as available in Switzerland that are statutory rights which are necessary part of descendant’s estate. The following characteristics are certain to constitute digital inheritance in the cyber world. 
i) Physicalessness Characteristic:                                      
The actual hold of digital properties / assets may constitute subjective rights but the major question is of non – physicalness 11 character of digital data which may not be subjective property right 12. In order, that such data falls into the descendant’s estate, the testator must have digital possession 13 under safe unique identity account over these virtual digital data. Physical possession is correlate object which may be understood literally in the terms of virtual possession of digital data. .
ii) Server’ server is trustee:
In process to create digital inheritance in cyber space the testator’s saved digital data is transferred to a service provider to digital library on the service's server being the service server as trustee. In such case, that the testator has had access to the digital data e.g. online with a password. In that situation the password is an aid for access, which creates possession in a legal sense. Then the access to the digital data falls into the decedent's estate.
·         Manageability by Testator:
Where a testator wants to dispose of its inheritance of digital data 14, he can make it specific in its life time instructing the web service provider, so being sole possessor of digital assets 15 and having full control over passwords and access he may pass the key to its assignees or agents.
·         Analysis with reference of laws of Switzerland: 16
As soon as the assignee does notice of his digital data the other heirs may get knowledge of the existence of digital data and will be authorized (laws of Switzerland) to have legal title as a right, the legal heirs nevertheless entitle as right to the declared will of testator, this protects legal fraction of each heir if the digital data has pecuniary value. In Switzerland online solutions are available there. Cyber Legacy Locker 17  stores all your information in the cloud and requires the client to name two different people to contact in case of death. That restricts anyone from trying to claim the client has died in order to get to their secret relevant data. Legacy Locker also lets the client name different beneficiaries for different online accounts. A similar offering, Secure Safe, is from Switzerland — and the Swiss know their way around secure accounts.
·         Maintaining backup of digital inheritance:
A digital vault 18 having uniform policies for save custody and relinquishment, being maintained in cyberspace 18 may be best option  to create regularly a backup of the most important assets and deposit it offsite therefore authorized a single person that may post-mortem share out digital assets. On the proper filing of application by the legal heir of testator the process of relinquishment of may contemplate of handing over the digital assets which may confirm the legal identity of legal heirs. The digital estate planner 19 may sole entity to entertain the application filed by legal heirs and allow it after consideration the reason may be given by the digital estate planner for admission of application. The server service provider shall be certain to entertain application for relinquishment of digital data after approval by the digital estate planner.
·         The Case of Benjamin Stassen: 21
Benjamin Stassen committed suicide without leaving a diary note. As personal representatives of his estate, his parents sought access to his online records for an explanation as to why he committed suicide. They contacted Google and Facebook asking the companies to release their son's passwords so that they could access his G-Mail and Facebook accounts. Both companies refused on the grounds of privacy.  Benjamin Stassen's parents obtained a Court Order forcing Google and Facebook to give them access to their son's records. Google complied with the Court Order. However, whilst the Order released Facebook from their duty of client confidentiality, the company is standing by its policy of not allowing personal representatives access to accounts.
Commentary:
Legal analysts commented that recent court orders can change the nature of user agreements. Online companies’ user agreements are contracts with the user that typically guarantee privacy and prohibit account access to others beside the user. There is almost no binding legal precedent out there when it comes to digital assets. It’s a concern of internet service providers being caught between privacy and the meaning of their contracts and being faced with a court order to which there could be quite severe penalties if they don’t comply with it. Some of the ones that we expect to be passed on, like getting access to online bank account statements, doing online bill paying, those probably we would expect others to be able to take control over. Many of us probably think that once we die, our online accounts should either be memorialized or deleted entirely. Online social medias do assume that the user wants privacy, there is all kinds of advice on passwords and password strength to make sure that there is no unauthorized use. Social media website Facebook has two options for a dead user’s account. The first allows an account to be memorialized, which leaves the profile up so that friends and family can leave posts in remembrance, but restricts the profile and associated content to the Facebook "friends" that the deceased had while alive. A proof of death must be provided for an account to be memorialized. In some instances, Facebook allows family members to have an account deactivated. Other companies have different policies regarding a deceased person’s online account. According to Google’s web site, in rare cases, they may provide the content of a deceased person’s account to an authorized representative of the person. Meanwhile, Yahoo says on its site that all accounts are non-transferable and it will delete an account when they receive a death certificate.
 References:
1. Succession by which an estate descended in intestacy to the heirs in mass is universal succession. In universal succession, heirs divide the property among themselves and pay the creditors. Pursuant to Section 3-312 of the Uniform Probate Code, the heirs of an intestate or the residuary devisees under a will can become universal successors to the decedent's estate by assuming personal liability for taxes, debts of the decedent, claims against the decedent or the estate, and distributions due other heirs, devisees, and persons entitled to property of the decedent. Minors, incapacitated, protected, or unascertained persons are excluded. Heirs or residuary legatees are entitled to take possession, control and title to a decedent's estate by assuming a personal obligation to pay taxes, debts, claims, and distributions. See at http://definitions.uslegal.com/u/universal-succession/
2. Roman law, the law of ancient Rome from the time of the founding of the city in 753 bce until the fall of the Western Empire in the 5th century ce. It remained in use in the Eastern, or Byzantine, Empire until 1453. As a legal system, Roman law has affected the development of law in most of Western civilization as well as in parts of the East. It forms the basis for the law codes of most countries of continental Europe (see civil law) and derivative systems elsewhere. See at http://www.britannica.com/EBchecked/topic/507759/Roman-law
3.S J Tubrazy defines Digital inheritance at http://dictionary.reverso.net/english-definition/Digital%20Inheritance
4. A progressing virtual world of global computers having networks of interdependent information technology infrastructures, telecommunications networks and computer processing systems in which online interactions takes place defined by S J Tubrazy see at http://dictionary.reverso.net/english-definition/Cyberspace%20world
5.  Cyber object is virtual component in cyberspace which may be in any form and may execute any function, solely or partially see at http://dictionary.reverso.net/english-definition/Cyber%20object
6. Dealing with the Digital Remains of the Dead by Damien McCallig http://www.deathwithdignity.org/2014/01/09/dealing-with-the-digital-remains-of-the-dead
7. Contacting Twitter about a deceased user, see at https://support.twitter.com/articles/87894-contacting-twitter-about-a-deceased-user
8. Deactivating, Deleting & Memorializing Accounts, see at https://www.facebook.com/help/359046244166395/; Dealing with a Deceased's Social Media Accounts, see at https://www.concentrafinancial.ca/documents/trust/etr/800-692.pdf
9. Succession by which an estate descended in intestacy to the heirs in mass is universal succession. In universal succession, heirs divide the property among themselves and pay the creditors. Pursuant to Section 3-312 of the Uniform Probate Code, the heirs of an interstate or the residuary devisees under a will can become universal successors to the decedent's estate by assuming personal liability for taxes, debts of the decedent, claims against the decedent or the estate, and distributions due other heirs, devisees, and persons entitled to property of the decedent. Minors, incapacitated, protected, or unascertained persons are excluded. Heirs or residuary legatees are entitled to take possession, control and title to a decedent's estate by assuming a personal obligation to pay taxes, debts, claims, and distributions. See at http://definitions.uslegal.com/u/universal-succession/; "It may be that Lloyds LJ's reservation in relation to  universal succession  was intended to relate only to the question of consent rather than the question of notice. But if the consent of the other party to the transferred contract is not necessary in a case of  universal succession  (as in manifest it cannot be), it becomes clear that the notice is no more than at most a procedural requirement. The question whether any such notice is a matter to be resolved by the law of the forum. English law does require such notice and it has now been given. In the Baytur S.A. case the rejected argument was that the assignee had automatically become a party once the assignments was effective in equity. All I decide in this case is that the merger did not automatically kill the arbitration. See at Republic of Kazakhstan v Istil Group Inc [2006] EWHC 448 (Comm) (03 April 2006) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Comm/2006/448.html Cite as: [2006] EWHC 448 (Comm), [2006] ArbLR 41
10. National Reports on the Transfer of Moveable in Europe ‘Notion of ownership and types of property rights Page 375’Netherlands, Switzerland, Czech Republic, Slovakia, Malta, Latvia by Wolfgang Faber, Brigitta Lurger
11.  Intangible Assets see at http://www4.nau.edu/comptr/policies_procedures/com140.html
12. A subjective right is a power or force that inheres in an individual, and an objective right is one that is granted to a person by law, whether human or divine, The History of Rights in Western Thought by Kenneth Pennington see at http://faculty.cua.edu/pennington/Law508/tierney2.htm;  Property and Protest: Political Theory and Subjective Rights in Fourteenth-Century England by Cary J. Nederman see at http://journals.cambridge.org/action/displayAbstract?fromPage=online&aid=5317292
13. Actual hold of digital assets with or without lawful title defined by S J Tubrazy at http://dictionary.reverso.net/english-definition/Digital%20possession
14.  Inheritance Laws and Rights of Heirs, see at  http://bighow.net/1193678-Inheritance_Laws_and_Rights_of_Heirs.html
15. Pirate Attitudes: SOPA, PIPA, and the Struggle to Control Digital Properties by Davis Smith see at http://scholarlykitchen.sspnet.org/2012/01/18/pirate-attitudes-sopa-pipa-and-the-struggle-to-control-digital-properties/;
16.  5 tips for digital estate planning By TOM NAWROCKI see at http://www.lifehealthpro.com/2013/10/10/5-tips-for-digital-estate-planning?t=life-sales-strategies&page=2 ; final paper succession by Sheila Padaoan Garcia see at http://www.scribd.com/doc/183742284/final-paper-succession-docx ; Concept of a digital will to pass on online assets is yet to catch on in the country Shelley Singh see at http://articles.economictimes.indiatimes.com/2014-03-29/news/48684234_1_facebook-account-digital-assets-digital-will
17. Cyber Legacy Locker is the safe and secure way to pass encrypted access key of online accounts to authorized assignee defined by s j tubrazy see at http://woerterbuch.reverso.net/englisch-definitionen/Cyber%20Legacy%20Locker
18. Technology Heirlooms? Considerations for Passing Down and Inheriting Digital Materials see at https://www.google.com.pk/url?sa=t&rct=j&q=&esrc=s&source=web&cd=6&cad=rja&uact=8&ved=0CEUQFjAF&url=http%3A%2F%2Fresearch.microsoft.com%2Fpubs%2F157558%2Fp337-odom.pdf&ei=1TndU7ObFYmp0QWJ_YGgAw&usg=AFQjCNEj-53MY7bW-zuPnq6INO2d3DuSkA&sig2=qhup8yWKrsDOqOplcJXazQ
19. Digital vault is a properly secured encrypted system where digital assets are saved defined by s j tubrazy at http://dictionary.reverso.net/english-definition/digital%20vault
20. Digital estate Planning is the process having uniform rules of envisaging and arranging for the clearance of digital assets during a person physical life under virtual identity defined by s j tubrazy see at http://dictionary.reverso.net/english-definition/Digital%20estate%20Planning
21. Leaving a digital legacy in your Will by Oliver Embley see at http://wedlakebell.com/articles-and-comment/2014/05/02/leaving-a-digital-legacy-in-your-will/ ; Creating A Digital Inheritance For Online Assets And Personal Data see at http://www.mondaq.com/x/238876/wills+intestacy+estate+planning/Creating+A+Digital+Inheritance+For+Online+Assets+And+Personal+Data











Monday, 13 October 2014

cyber forensic




Cyber forensic is the discovery of admissible evidence using techniques with computers and electronic digital devices. (S J Tubrazy)