Under the provisions of the HIPAA privacy act, it appears that the adorable pictures of children lining the walls of pediatricians’ offices everywhere could constitute a privacy violation. Sometimes it seems that the law could be a bit more nuanced. The New York Times has more: http://nyti.ms/1ovHH3h
Monthly Archives: August 2014
Estate Planning and Your Digital Accounts
What happens to your Gmail account when you die? What about your Facebook page or your Twitter account?
Well, it’s not clear. A few states have enacted legislation to give executors and personal representatives the power to access the digital accounts of the deceased, while most states rely merely on the privacy policies of the service providers, such as Google, or Twitter or whatever company hosts the account. Click on this link to see where your state falls with respect to this issue: https://www.everplans.com/tools-and-resources/state-by-state-digital-estate-planning-laws.
The current lack of legal clarity can cause huge disruption and frustration in peoples’ lives, as is evident in this story from the Columbus Dispatch: http://www.dispatch.com/content/stories/business/2014/08/03/access-to-online-accounts-of-deceased-not-a-given.html.
What all this means is that when doing your estate planning, it is vitally important these days to make arrangements for your digital accounts, just as you do for your financial accounts.