Ottawa Citizen

Lawyers discuss if digital data should die with us

No legislatio­n to deal with family’s rights, privacy issues

- TOBI COHEN

Thinking of bequeathin­g your coveted music collection and extensive home library to a loved one after you’re gone?

If it’s on your iPod and Kobo, as opposed to the Ikea shelving unit in the den, think again.

What happens to a person’s digital data after they’ve died is a question lawyers started to wrestle with Tuesday during the final day of the Canadian Bar Associatio­n’s annual conference in Saskatoon.

Doug Surtees, a wills lawyer and associate dean of law at the University of Saskatchew­an, told Postmedia News in an interview that the law, as it’s written, doesn’t take “digital assets” into account and that it’s time for legislatio­n to deal with what will inevitably become a growing problem.

“Companies write agreements in ways that give people very, very few rights with respect to their digital asset, so I think what we need is legislatio­n that simply sets out the rules,” Surtees said, noting buying an album or book from iTunes or Amazon, for example, is not the same as buying a CD from HMV or a novel from Chapters.

“What you actually own is a non-transferab­le licence to access a digital copy.”

In other words, not only will your loved ones have no access to your account when you die, if the hard drive or eReader you’ve left the content on is destroyed, they cannot ask the company to restore the informatio­n, as would the primary account holder.

It’s an issue actor Bruce Willis raised last fall. According to reports, he considered suing Apple over iTunes ownership rights and while it appears nothing ever became of it, Surtees said it’ll likely take a rich celebrity from California, where many of these companies are based, to really get the ball rolling.

Still, legislatio­n would “give consumers some recourse” to take a company to court to fight for access.

“Contract law and wills law was set a long time ago and just didn’t contemplat­e things like digital assets,” Surtees said. “What specifical­ly should that legislatio­n — what rights should it grant us? That’s the million-dollar question. That’s why I think we need to have discussion­s like the one the (bar associatio­n) is starting.”

Another key issue in the digital age, he said, is privacy.

While some may want loved ones to be able to access their digital assets after death, Surtees said, with respect to email, some may want that deleted.

Brian Bowman, a Winnipeg lawyer who specialize­s in privacy, access to informatio­n and social media law, is the incoming chairman of the Canadian Bar Associatio­n’s national privacy and access law section and the one spearheadi­ng the conversati­on about digital data rights after death.

Access rights to social media accounts currently differ from platform to platform, he said.

While Google will give parents and executors full access to a deceased person’s account, Bowman said Facebook will allow loved ones to transform a person’s page into an online memorial on demand but with limited ability to manipulate informatio­n on the site.

Meanwhile Twitter, he said, will shut down an account if advised of a death.

“For Canadians, it’s really hit-and-miss depending on the platform,” he said. “For people who are grieving the loss of a loved one, it just makes it so much more complicate­d for them and in many cases, they’re just not getting the informatio­n that common sense would dictate in some cases that they should get access to.”

Not only could an annual birthday reminder be painful for those grieving an untimely death, he said, the parents of children who’ve committed suicide, for example, may want access to social media to try to piece together what happened.

While legislatio­n isn’t necessaril­y the answer to these problems, Bowman said the debate is long overdue and he hopes to “kick-start” a discussion with industry stakehold- ers, social media sites and privacy watchdogs that could lead to a set of “industry guidelines” and “best practices.”

Furthermor­e, as Canadians live more and more of their lives online, individual­s themselves are also thinking more about their own digital legacy, he said.

For example, he’s already heard of situations where individual­s have laid out their digital wishes in writing.

That said, there are currently no requiremen­ts to recognize a will that outlines which online accounts should be closed, which should be transferre­d and to whom the passwords should be given.

“In some situations you might have a will and they’ll just say, ‘That’s nice but we don’t care,’” he said. “It’s still very much evolving and there needs to be more discussion on it.”

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