Know which laws apply to your digital assets
RUFADAA (United States). 48 US states have adopted the Revised Uniform Fiduciary Access to Digital Assets Act, which governs whether and how an executor can access your online accounts. The Uniform Law Commission publishes a state-by-state adoption map at uniformlaws.org/committees/community-home?CommunityKey=f7237fc4-74c2-4728-81c6-b39a91ecdf22. The key practical point: under RUFADAA, the "online tool" you set up inside NexudeIT (your Legacy Contact and Digital Will) overrides any contrary provision in your paper will. That's why the in-platform setup matters even if you have a lawyer-drafted will.
GDPR & post-mortem privacy (Europe). The GDPR itself does not extend rights to deceased data subjects, but each member state has its own rules. The European Data Protection Board (edpb.europa.eu) publishes per-state summaries. France's Loi Informatique et Libertés and Spain's LOPDGDD extend rights post-mortem; Germany's approach is more limited.
UK Inheritance & Trustees' Powers Act, the Australian Succession Acts of each state, and Canadian provincial probate codes all govern executor authority over digital assets in their jurisdictions.