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Understanding your choices when it comes to inheritance of digital assets
What will happen to your NFTs, digital art, and crypto when you die? You need to understand how to pass on your Web3 assets to your children or heirs.
Hello. My name is Wasim Ahmad, and I'm with Vault12. Today we're going to talk about inheritance for Web3.
We have to care about Web3 inheritance because it is different from the relatively straightforward steps for a traditional inheritance. With traditional assets, you go to the bank or the broker, you tell them that someone has passed on or is incapacitated, and you get access to those assets. In the Web3 world, you, as the owner of those assets, are responsible for the security and safekeeping of those assets. If you haven't recorded all details about your assets and communicated them to the people who are going to be the beneficiaries, those assets will likely be lost.
Who cares about inheritance for Web3 assets? The most conspicuous group is NFT collectors. People have an emotional attachment to NFTs. They're buying NFTs that they love, often regardless of the value. These are cherished assets that they fully intend to pass on to others.
The second group that cares a lot about passing on Web3 assets is creators. Creators usually have an inventory of NFTs, likely in the form of an inventory of art. They also have royalty wallets, so that every time an NFT is transferred or sold, a portion of that sale's proceeds goes into that wallet. These are wallets that need to be protected for the long term!
The third group that needs to pass on Web3 assets is, of course, crypto enthusiasts who have purchased cryptocurrency and want to make sure that it will be passed on.
The most essential part of making sure that your Web3 assets will be inherited is making sure that you have a bang up-to-date inventory of all of your assets.
We've all purchased NFTs and cryptocurrencies on different blockchains, which are stored in a myriad of different Web3 wallets. The number of possible ways to acquire digital assets means that there's not going to be just one thing that needs to be inherited; there's going to be multiple components. Each of these need to be documented, and that list needs to be bang up-to-date.
One of the main elements of risk relates to the protection of your asset inventory. Somehow, you actually need to pass that inventory list on. Consider what Web3 wallets tell you to do from a security perspective: they say to write down the seed phrase, write down your private key, back up your private key and your seed phrase so that you have it. Often you're doing this on paper, and typically with inheritance-related things, you're writing things down on paper and giving them to your lawyers. Every time you write stuff down on paper, although you might also store it in a safe, or some other safe place, the minute that you hand your asset inventory over to a law firm, a lawyer, or any set of people, you are exposing that information, which initiates a potentially unacceptable risk. After all, it will hopefully be a long time before anyone will need to use those credentials!
In contrast, Vault12 Guard does not disclose your asset inventory to anyone until it is needed.
The second risk is that many people have relied solely on technology like hardware wallets, and other types of cold storage device to store their seed phrases and their private keys. And yes, these technologies can offer secure access to Web3 wallets. However, just storing assets on a hardware wallet does not mean that everything is set up for inheritance in the future! Secure storage protects your assets from internet-based threats and from casual exposure or hacking. But for inheritance, you actually need to communicate what the assets are and how to access them.
You still need to back up your hardware wallets, but you also need some kind of solution - like Vault12 Guard - that will take that information and pass it along to your beneficiary.
It is very common to assign beneficiaries or legacy contacts to all kinds of accounts, from bank and insurance accounts to social media accounts like Facebook. Assigning a beneficary for your NFTs, art and crypto should be just as easy - and with Vault12 Guard, it is.
Introducing Vault12 Guard: How to ensure that your NFTs, digital art, and crypto pass on to your heirs when you die. Vault12 Guard protects your assets today and in future generations.
Our latest technology release Vault 12 Guard is a mobile phone app designed for ordinary people who are collectors, creators creating digital art and NFTs, and crypto enthusiasts buying cryptocurrency. Vault12 Guard is designed to make it as simple as possible to back up all of your Web3 assets and then assign a beneficiary who can receive those assets in the event of incapacitation or death of the owner.
With Vault12 Guard, it's very simple to back things up. It's very simple to activate Inheritance. It's very simple for your heirs to then retrieve those assets when needed.
How does it work? Very easy: Download the app from any of the app stores (iOS or Android), install it, create a digital vault, and then you can immediately start adding assets, which will be stored locally on your phone device for full, distributed, decentralized backup and inheritance.
With Vault12 Guard, you can add and assign your own Guardians. These are people that you know: they could be business partners, family members, or friends who will guard your vault. Your Guardians will grant access to your Web3 assets on the event of your passing.
Once you've designated a beneficiary in Vault12 Guard, then everything's set for inheritance. You don't really need to do anything else apart from every time you add an asset, make sure that you put it in the Vault, with a backup, for your beneficiary to use when the time comes. To activate inheritance, all the beneficiary needs to do is make the request, the Guardians review and approve it, and then the beneficiary is granted acccess to all of the assets. The beneficiary can then access those assets and transfer them to whoever is the Rightful heir as defined in your will.
One key takeaway is that first, you should work with an attorney to plan your Trust & Estate strategy.
Secondly, you need to understand the risks associated with backing up and planning the inheritance of Web3 assets. Given those risks, you'll need to choose a solution that works for you. We think that Vault12 Guard is an excellent solution, and can do an excellent job for you. Use it, or an alternative Inheritance solution, or risk losing everything forever.
Wasim is a serial entrepreneur with five exits, and an advisor in the fields of AI, blockchain, cryptocurrency, and encryption solutions. At Vault12, he led the private and public fundraising efforts, and focuses today on expanding the Vault12 ecosystem. His crypto experience began with AlphaPoint, where he worked with the founding team to launch the world's first crypto trading exchanges.
Previously he was a founding member of Voltage Security, a spinout from Stanford University, that launched Identity-Based Encryption (IBE), a breakthrough in Public Key Cryptography, and pioneered the use of sophisticated data encryption to protect sensitive data across the world's payment systems. Wasim serves on the board of non-profit, StartOut, and is a Seedcamp and WeWork Labs global mentor.
Wasim graduated with a Bachelor of Science degree in Physics and French from the University of Sussex.