Transferring a Social Account (Twice)

Let’s say you want your Instagram account passed to your family—but only after a close friend scrubs it for things that don’t need to be part of the permanent record.

Totally possible.

With DigitalLIFEBox™, you can assign multiple transfers for the same asset. In this case, you give access to a friend with a clear instruction: clean up anything you don’t want your family to see. After that, they initiate the next transfer to your chosen beneficiary.

You stay in control—not just of who gets access, but when and why.

It’s not about deleting your past. It’s about shaping what gets remembered, and who gets to see it. Whether it’s one handoff or two, you decide the timeline, the logic, and the trust structure.

Legacy isn’t one-size-fits-all—and neither are the people you rely on to help carry it forward.

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Can I Schedule Transfers to Happen at a Specific Time, Like Birthdays?

Yes. And it’s one of our favorite features.

With DigitalLIFEBox™, you can set your assets—or even just messages—to transfer on specific dates or events. Want your daughter to get access to a video on her 21st birthday? Or a journal on the anniversary of your passing?

You can do that.

This isn’t about transactions. It’s about meaning. You’re not just planning for death. You’re creating continuity. Moments that matter—delivered, even if you’re not there to witness them.

Some people call it digital legacy. Others call it emotional backup. We just think it’s a better way to stay connected.

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What’s the Difference Between a Trustee and a Beneficiary in DigitalLIFEBox™?

Simple: a Beneficiary receives. A Trustee makes sure that happens properly.

In DigitalLIFEBox™, you assign beneficiaries to specific digital assets—just like you would with a bank account or life insurance policy. A trustee is someone you trust to oversee the process. They help ensure your wishes are followed, especially if you’ve set conditions for when or how things should be shared.

Trustees don’t access your private data while you’re alive. They just act as stewards if you’re no longer around. And you get to choose more than one amongst other policies you can set.

Think of it like this: a trustee is like the referee, and a beneficiary is the one that takes the ball behind the line.

One manages the transfer. The other lives with the outcome.

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