Designate the person who
reaches your vault after you.
This is a platform-resident designation under the Revised Uniform Fiduciary Access to Digital Assets Act. Properly completed, it controls — overriding general platform terms and any conflicting language in a will or trust that does not specifically address digital assets.
A short, witnessed nomination.
- Name your fiduciary (the person you trust with access).
- Choose the scope — full access, archival only, or instructional.
- Decide what they may see (content) versus what they may handle (catalog).
- Add a successor in case the first is unable or unwilling.
- Sign with your registered identity. We retain a tamper-evident copy and timestamp on a private ledger.
You may update or revoke at any time while competent. The most recent valid nomination controls.
Why this exists, and why it matters.
When a person dies or is incapacitated, the people closest to them are routinely locked out of their digital accounts. Photos, correspondence, contracts, credentials, holdings, family records — all of it can sit behind a sign-in screen that, by federal statute and platform policy, no one but the original account holder may pass.
The Revised Uniform Fiduciary Access to Digital Assets Act (RUFADAA) was adopted to fix that. It establishes three tiers of authority. A platform's online tool — a feature like the one on this page — is the highest. It controls over a will. It controls over the platform's own terms of service. It controls over a probate court's general orders that do not specifically address digital assets.
Most providers do not offer one. We do, on principle.
This is an account-management feature. It is not legal advice. We will work with your estate counsel on request — write to support@sprime.io.