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sixes_and_sevens comments on Open thread, July 21-27, 2014 - Less Wrong Discussion

4 Post author: polymathwannabe 21 July 2014 01:15PM

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Comment author: Viliam_Bur 22 July 2014 06:54:07PM 2 points [-]

What would happen if the document gets stolen?

Comment author: sixes_and_sevens 22 July 2014 08:43:45PM 2 points [-]

Identity theft and general info-sec is obviously a concern, but the way I see it, I either trust someone to safeguard these details or I don't.

I can try and minimise the chances of the document being compromised. I briefly considered some sort of encrypted flash drive business, but I figure a hard-copy subject to physical security measures is probably a lot safer than something that can be drag-and-dropped onto a Windows Vista desktop. I can also minimise the amount of personally-identifying information in the document, so anyone obtaining the document without context wouldn't know who these various assets and policies applied to.

My plan is to produce two physical documents and give them to two geographically-disparate immediate family members for safekeeping.

Comment author: VAuroch 23 July 2014 10:32:39PM 0 points [-]

A safe deposit box is probably worth the cost.

Comment author: Alsadius 24 July 2014 11:01:41PM 0 points [-]

It's far more expensive than the will that he felt wasn't worth paying for.

Comment author: VAuroch 28 July 2014 05:05:27PM -1 points [-]

Safe deposit boxes also store a number of other documents securely, such as passports, title deeds to property, birth certificates, etc. In addition to any jewelry or whatever with large cash value, if you have any.

Comment author: Lumifer 28 July 2014 05:16:25PM 2 points [-]

Nowadays most paper documents are just a convenience (or an inconvenience). What really matters is the proper entry in some database in the cloud.

Replacing a missing passport, title deed, etc. is neither hard nor expensive.

Comment author: Alsadius 28 July 2014 05:14:23PM 2 points [-]

But if he has too low a net worth to make a will worthwhile, what are the odds he has anything safety-deposit-box-worthy? Spending fifty bucks a year to hold your passport seems terribly inefficient - it's not so valuable that an occasional replacement will be worse.