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Managing a Digital Estate Without Paper Records

Ronald J Leach

$33.95   $30.23

Paperback

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English
Aftermath
28 February 2024
Managing an estate after the death of a loved one is hard. It is especially hard if there are no paper records. This book, based on the author's experience, shows how to do this. Specific items discussed include:

Setting up the estate Becoming the Administrator/Personal Representative Tax records and tax reporting Getting into the deceased person's computer Gaining access to existing bank brokerage and treasury accounts Finding missing funds Creating business records from scratch Social Security Navigating the pivacy policies of many tech companies Planning Leaving a digital legacy

Only minimal computer literacy is needed to understand this book.

By:  
Imprint:   Aftermath
Dimensions:   Height: 229mm,  Width: 152mm,  Spine: 7mm
Weight:   177g
ISBN:   9798224875191
Pages:   112
Publication Date:  
Audience:   General/trade ,  ELT Advanced
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active

About the Author I recently retired from being a professor of computer science at Howard University for over 25 years, with 9 of those years as a department chair. (I was a math professor for 16 years before that.) While I was department chair, we sent more students to work at Microsoft in the 2004-5 academic year than any other college or university in the United States. We also established a graduate certificate program in computer security, which became the largest certificate program at the university. I had major responsibility for working with technical personnel to keep our department's hundreds of computers functional and virus-free, while providing email service to several hundred users. We had to withstand constant hacker attacks and we learned how to reduce the vulnerability of our computer systems. As a scholar/researcher, I studied complex computer systems and their behavior when attacked or faced with heavy, unexpected loads. I wrote five books on computing, from particular programming languages, to the internal structure of sophisticated operating systems, to the development and efficient creation of highly complex applications. My long-term experience with computers (I had my first computer programming course in 1964) has helped me understand the nature of many of the computer attacks by potential identity thieves and, I hope, be able to explain them and how to defend against them, to a general audience of non-specialists. More than 5,000 people have attended my lectures on identity theft; many others have seen them on closed-circuit television. I have written more than twenty books, and more than 120 technical articles, most of which are in technical areas. My interests in data storage and access meshed well with my genealogical interests when I wrote the Genealogy Technology column of the Maryland Genealogical Society Journal for several years. I was the editor or co-editor of that society's journal for many years.

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