Sunday, March 29, 2026

How to Include Your Digital Life in Your Will — A Plain English Guide to Digital Estate Planning

 Most people spend years building a digital life — thousands of photos, years of emails, social media accounts, cloud storage full of documents and videos — and then never think once about what happens to any of it when they die.


The answer, in most cases, is that it disappears.


Not because anyone wanted it gone. But because nobody made a plan.


The good news is that making a plan does not require a lawyer, does not cost much money, and does not take more than a few hours. Here is exactly what you need to do.


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Understand What Is At Stake


Before you plan, take a moment to think about everything you have built digitally.


Your photos. Your email going back years. Your social media accounts and the conversations, posts, and memories stored there. Your cloud storage — Google Drive, iCloud, Dropbox. Your online financial accounts. Cryptocurrency if you own any. A blog or website if you have one. Subscriptions and loyalty programs with real monetary value.


Now ask yourself: if you died tomorrow, could your family access any of that? Would they even know where to look?


For most people the honest answer is no. And the law does not automatically help them. Most platforms have strict terms of service that prevent anyone — even a spouse or child — from accessing an account without explicit authorization. Federal privacy laws can block access even when family members know the password.


Without a plan, your digital life ends with you.


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Step One: Make a Digital Asset Inventory


Start by writing down everything you have online. Go through this list and add your own:


Email accounts — all of them, not just the main one. Social media accounts. Cloud storage services. Photo storage (Google Photos, iCloud, Amazon Photos). Financial accounts — bank, investment, PayPal, Venmo, Cash App. Cryptocurrency wallets and the keys to access them. Subscription services. Domain names or websites you own. Any online business accounts. Password managers.


For each one, write down the email address used to create the account, the username if different, and the password or where the password can be found. Keep this document somewhere secure — a locked physical location, or a trusted password manager that has a legacy access feature.


One critical rule: never put passwords directly in your will. Wills become public documents during probate. Anything in your will is accessible to anyone. Keep passwords in a separate secure document and reference that document in your will.


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Step Two: Set Up Legacy Access on the Platforms Themselves


Several major platforms already have built-in tools that let you designate someone to access your account after you die. These are the most legally solid way to ensure access because they operate under the platform's own rules.


Google has an Inactive Account Manager. You can designate a trusted person to receive your data — emails, photos, documents — if your account becomes inactive. Set it up at myaccount.google.com/inactive-account-manager.


Facebook has a Legacy Contact. You can designate someone to manage your profile as a memorial after you pass, or you can choose to have your account deleted. Set it up in your Facebook settings under Memorialization Settings.


Apple has a Digital Legacy feature that lets you designate up to five Legacy Contacts who can access your iCloud data after your death. Set it up in your Apple ID settings.


Set these up on every platform that offers them. They represent your most direct, legally enforceable instructions to the platform about what should happen to your account.


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Step Three: Name a Digital Executor


A digital executor is a person you designate specifically to handle your digital assets after you die. This can be the same person as your regular executor, but it does not have to be. Pick someone who is comfortable with technology, trustworthy with sensitive information, and capable of following detailed instructions.


Give your digital executor a copy of your asset inventory. Tell them what you want done with each account — preserved, deleted, or transferred. Include their name and role in your will.


As of early 2025, 47 states have adopted the Revised Uniform Fiduciary Access to Digital Assets Act, which gives legal authority to executors and trustees to access digital assets — but only if the estate plan explicitly grants that authority. Without the language in your legal documents, your executor may have no legal right to access anything.


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Step Four: Use One of These Digital Estate Planning Services


If you want to do this right without hiring a lawyer, several online services can help you build a legally valid will and digital estate plan.


FreeWill (freewill.com) — Free to use. Lets you create a legally valid will in about 20 minutes and name a digital executor. Good starting point for most people.


Trust & Will (trustandwill.com) — A paid service that creates more comprehensive estate plans including trusts, healthcare directives, and digital asset provisions. Good for people with more complex estates.


GoodTrust (mygoodtrust.com) — Specifically focused on digital assets. Lets you securely document your accounts, name trusted individuals, and create instructions for how your digital life should be handled.


Clocr (clocr.com) — Lets you organize and pass on your digital legacy including social media, documents, and personal memories. Includes a time capsule feature.


SecureSafe (securesafe.com) — Cloud storage with password management and a built-in data inheritance system.


Any of these is better than nothing. Start with FreeWill if you want free and fast. Step up to Trust & Will if you want comprehensive.


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Step Five: Do Not Forget the Physical Archive


No matter how carefully you plan your digital estate, physical preservation still matters. Hard copies of the most important documents — birth certificates, family photos printed and labeled, handwritten letters — do not require passwords, accounts, or internet access to survive.


Print your favorite photos. Write letters. Keep a journal. The physical record and the digital record together are stronger than either one alone.


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Your Digital Life Is Part of Your Legacy


The photos you took, the stories you wrote, the emails you sent to people you loved — none of that is trivial. All of it is part of who you were. All of it matters to the people who will miss you when you are gone.


Plan for it. Preserve it. Give the people who love you the ability to access it when the time comes.


That is not a morbid task. It is one of the most loving things you can do.


5D Memory Crystals: The Technology That Could Preserve Your Life for Billions of Years

 Imagine writing your life story, your family photos, your home videos, and your personal documents onto a disc the size of your palm — and knowing that disc could survive for billions of years without any power, without any maintenance, and without any risk of data loss.


That technology is not science fiction anymore. It exists right now. It is called a 5D memory crystal and it may be the most important preservation technology ever invented.


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What Is a 5D Memory Crystal?


A 5D memory crystal is a storage medium made from fused silica glass — the same material used in high-performance optics. Data is written into the glass using an ultrafast femtosecond laser that creates tiny nanostructures invisible to the naked eye. Those structures encode information across five dimensions: three spatial coordinates, plus the orientation and intensity of the light-altering structures embedded in the glass.


The result is a storage medium that requires no electricity to maintain, no cooling systems, no magnetic fields, and no chemical stability. It just sits there, holding the data, indefinitely.


How long is indefinitely? Scientists estimate the storage life of a 5D memory crystal at 13.8 billion years — roughly the current age of the universe. The glass can survive temperatures up to 190 degrees Celsius. It is resistant to radiation. It does not degrade over time the way hard drives, magnetic tape, or even optical discs eventually do.


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What Has Already Been Stored on One?


The company leading the commercialization of this technology is SPhotonix, based in Newark, Delaware, with research labs at the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology. Their chief scientific officer, Professor Peter Kazansky of the University of Southampton, spent over twenty years developing the technology before SPhotonix was founded in 2024.


Here is what has already been preserved on 5D memory crystals:


The entire human genome — 15 gigabytes of the complete blueprint of human DNA, stored for billions of years in a disc you could hold in your hand.


All of Wikipedia — the entirety of human knowledge as recorded by the largest encyclopedia ever created, compressed into a small crystal.


The Eon Ark Time Capsule — an archive of recorded conversations from 2024 and 2025, preserved for future generations.


A 5D crystal was also aboard Elon Musk's SpaceX Falcon Heavy launch in 2018, carrying what was described as critical planetary backup data, now orbiting the sun in the glove compartment of a red Tesla Roadster.


In 2025, SPhotonix sent a crystal containing images of the oldest cave paintings in human history alongside AI-generated art into orbit on a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket.


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How Can You Use It Today?


SPhotonix currently serves enterprise and institutional clients — data centers, museums, research archives, and businesses that need to store large amounts of data for very long periods of time. Their archival service is open for business through their website at 5dmemorycrystal.com and sphotonix.com.


At this stage, reading the data back still requires specialized equipment done through SPhotonix's lab. The company is developing a field-deployable reader that should be available within the next couple of years, with an estimated cost of around $6,000. Writing equipment currently runs around $30,000. These are enterprise-level tools for now, not something most individuals will purchase themselves.


However, what this means for ordinary people is significant: if you want your most important data — your family history, your photos, your documents, your personal archive — preserved at the highest possible level of durability, you can work with SPhotonix or an authorized partner to have that data encoded into a crystal.


Think of it like commissioning a physical monument, except this monument holds everything instead of just a name on a stone.


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Other Companies Working in This Space


SPhotonix is not alone. Microsoft has been running Project Silica, its own glass-based storage research program, for several years. Microsoft's version uses borosilicate glass and aims for a storage life of up to 10,000 years — shorter than SPhotonix's crystals but still orders of magnitude longer than anything else on the market.


A startup called Cerabyte is developing ceramic-based archival storage aimed at robotic library systems. A company called Biomemory is working on DNA-based storage that could pack 13 terabytes of data into a single drop of water, with a commercial launch planned before the end of 2026.


The permanent data storage industry is moving fast. What is available to institutions today will gradually become available to individuals over the next several years.


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What This Means for Everyday History


Here is the part that matters most to ordinary people.


Right now, your photos exist on a phone that could break tomorrow. Your personal videos live in a cloud account tied to a company that could shut down in ten years. Your emails are stored on servers that require ongoing payments and active accounts to survive.


None of that is built to last. All of it is fragile.


A 5D memory crystal is built to outlast not just your lifetime but the entire lifespan of human civilization as we know it. Anything stored on one today could theoretically be read by humans — or whatever comes after humans — billions of years from now.


That is not just data storage. That is the closest thing to immortality that technology has ever offered ordinary people.


The question is whether we take advantage of it. Whether we decide that ordinary lives — the photos on your phone, the videos of your kids, the story of how you lived — are worth preserving at the same level of permanence as the human genome and all of Wikipedia.


I believe they are.


10 Simple Ways to Start Preserving Your Personal History Today

 Most people assume that preserving history is something done by museums, libraries, and governments. They think their own lives are not important enough to save.


They are wrong.


Everything you do, everywhere you go, every conversation you have is part of the historical record of this moment in time. Future generations will want to know what it was like to be alive right now — and the only way they will know is if ordinary people take the time to save it.


The good news is you do not need money, technical skills, or special equipment to start. Here are ten simple things you can do today.


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1. Write Down One Memory Right Now


Get a notebook or open a document on your phone and write down one specific memory. Not a summary — a real memory. Where were you standing? What did it smell like? What did someone say? Details are what make memories come alive for someone reading them a hundred years from now.


Do not worry about how it sounds. Just write it down. You can always clean it up later. Getting it out of your head and onto the page is the only thing that matters right now.


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2. Record Yourself Talking


Your voice is part of your history. Future generations will never hear it unless you record it. You do not need a microphone or studio. Your phone will do just fine.


Sit down and talk for ten minutes. Tell a story from your childhood. Describe your neighborhood. Explain what you do for work. Talk about what is happening in the world right now from your perspective. Then save that recording somewhere you will not lose it.


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3. Take a Photo of Something Ordinary Today


Everyone takes photos of birthdays and vacations. Nobody takes photos of the kitchen counter, the view from their front porch, or the inside of the car they drive every day. Those ordinary images are exactly what historians and future generations will treasure.


Take a photo today of something you normally would not photograph. Your street. Your bedroom. Your lunch. Save it with a note about the date and what was going on in your life at that moment.


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4. Write Letters to Your Children or Grandchildren


You do not need to have children to do this. Write a letter to whoever comes after you. Tell them what the world looks like from where you are standing. Tell them what you hope for them. Tell them what mistakes you made and what you learned.


Seal it in an envelope and put it somewhere safe. Date the outside. Someday someone will open it and feel like they are standing right next to you.


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5. Back Up Your Photos — Right Now


Go to your phone settings and make sure your photos are backing up to the cloud. Then go one step further and copy your most important photos to a second location — an external hard drive, a USB drive, or a second cloud service.


The single biggest reason ordinary people lose their visual history is that it lives in only one place. One broken phone, one cancelled subscription, and it is gone forever.


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6. Start a Daily or Weekly Journal


You do not have to write a lot. Even a few sentences a day adds up to something remarkable over time. Write down what happened. What you felt. What you ate. What the weather was like. What you were worried about.


A journal written honestly over years becomes one of the most valuable documents a family can possess. Every historian who has ever studied everyday life has said the same thing — personal journals are irreplaceable.


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7. Interview an Older Family Member


If you have parents, grandparents, aunts, uncles, or older friends still living — interview them. Record the conversation on your phone. Ask them about their childhood, their jobs, their parents, the world they grew up in.


Do not wait. This is the most urgent thing on this entire list. Every day we lose people who carried irreplaceable knowledge and stories. Once they are gone, those stories are gone too.


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8. Create a Password Document and Store It Safely


This sounds like a practical task but it is also a preservation task. If you die without leaving your passwords behind, your family will lose access to your email, your photos, your social media, your cloud storage, and everything in them.


Write down your most important passwords, the email address associated with each account, and basic instructions for what is in each one. Store it somewhere your family can find it — not in your will, which becomes a public document, but in a secure physical location or a trusted password manager with legacy access.


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9. Tell Your Story on Your Blog or Social Media


You already have an audience, even if it is small. Use it. Write about your life. Share your memories. Tell people what it is like to live where you live and do what you do. Every post, every story, every video you share becomes part of the public record.


Do not be embarrassed. Do not think your life is too ordinary. That is exactly the point. Ordinary life is what history is made of.


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10. Pick One Format and Start — Then Build From There


The biggest mistake people make when thinking about preservation is waiting until they have a complete plan. You do not need a complete plan. You need one action taken today.


Pick the one on this list that feels easiest and do it in the next hour. Write one memory. Record one video. Back up your photos. Interview your grandmother.


One action leads to another. Before long, you will have built something your family will treasure for generations.


Your life is already making history. The only question is whether you are saving it.


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Robert Lee Beers III is a writer and digital preservation advocate based in North Charleston, South Carolina.