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Scraped on 31/05/2025, 15:01:32 UTC
If you are a single bitcoin investor, would you rather teach a trusted family member about Bitcoin than involve your personal lawyer. I ask this because I grew to understand that lawyers are good at handling confidential issues like Wills.

The question is;
Who checks on the lawyer when they fail to declare or follow through with the instructions you left with them after you’ve passed on?
It carries a more greater risk than having a family member handle it. Both have a great deal of risk for sure. The means that would have been credible is a multisig wallet where, onethe keys to the multisig would be insplit between your willwards or spouse and the other can be left exposed tois kept in a trusted family memberwill so, your spouse maybe or wardsno one gets to have access before the time is right. This would ensure you don’t get to trust either parties to this.
Original archived Re: Who to trust: A lawyer or a family member.
Scraped on 31/05/2025, 14:56:48 UTC
If you are a single bitcoin investor, would you rather teach a trusted family member about Bitcoin than involve your personal lawyer. I ask this because I grew to understand that lawyers are good at handling confidential issues like Wills.

The question is;
Who checks on the lawyer when they fail to declare or follow through with the instructions you left with them after you’ve passed on?
It carries a more greater risk than having a family member handle it. Both have a great deal of risk for sure. The means that would have been credible is a multisig wallet where, one would be in your will and the other can be left exposed to a trusted family member, your spouse maybe or wards.