Gregg Fiscalini, Licensed Agent AFLAC

Gregg Fiscalini, Licensed Agent AFLAC I help companies fortify employee benefits. AFLAC delivers coverage that supplement major medical policies.

Where no major medical coverage is available these coverages provide a cash benefit that many times allow a family or individual to bridge the financial gap that occurs with unepected out of pocket costs associate with accident or illnes.

Could you manage your parents' finances in an emergency? If not, here's what you need to know.
09/27/2016

Could you manage your parents' finances in an emergency? If not, here's what you need to know.

If your parents become incapable of making financial decisions, you may need to take over their financial responsibilities. Here are key questions to ask.

Empowering women to make sound financial choices for their future.
09/22/2016

Empowering women to make sound financial choices for their future.

If you're a woman, odds are high that your pension will be lower than that for the men you car pool with to work.

You can do more with your retirement savings!  Learn about how you can convert 401(k)’s from previous employers into a m...
09/20/2016

You can do more with your retirement savings! Learn about how you can convert 401(k)’s from previous employers into a manageable retirement vehicle.

Why considering a rollover, a transfer of money between tax qualified retirement plans, may be right for you.

What’s more valuable to your family: Your home, your car, or you? Let’s look at how your insurance measures up.
06/27/2016

What’s more valuable to your family: Your home, your car, or you? Let’s look at how your insurance measures up.

See how you can protect what's important.

Learn why pre-retirees are taking a new approach to retirement planning.
06/23/2016

Learn why pre-retirees are taking a new approach to retirement planning.

Income annuities gain popularity among retirees and pre-retirees looking for...

Join us for something a little different . . .
06/21/2016

Join us for something a little different . . .

05/12/2016

Great article in National Law Review !

http://www.natlawreview.com/article/estate-planning-enters-digital-age

May 10, 2016

Estate Planning Enters the Digital Age
Thursday, May 5, 2016
One reality of modern life is our increasing reliance on digital information and services. It’s difficult to take and then order prints of photographs, accumulate travel rewards, book travel, sort through financial records, communicate with distant friends, and even keep abreast of breaking news without a computer and e-mail access. Most creditors and banks encourage customers to "go green" and receive bills and statements electronically. Medical records and histories are increasingly available to patients and caregivers via online systems. Many people use online rental sites to rent their under- or unused vacation property to offset carrying costs. Unfinished novels and other valuable content produced by authors and artists will likely be stored on a remote service in the cloud, instead of locally on a hard drive.
There are many crypto and digital currencies, such as Bitcoin. Domain names continue to garner seven- and eight-figure sales prices: the $35.6 million paid for "Insurance.com" in 2010 is an extreme example. Virtual gaming is enormously popular: one gamer named Jon Jacobs built, ran and ultimately sold $635,000 in digital assets (including a casino called "Club Neverdie" built on an asteroid) that only existed virtually in Entropia Universe, an online gaming platform.
Despite the increasing prevalence of digital assets in our lives, few online account custodians offer customers online tools allowing them to provide for access to or disposition of any property held in these accounts, or even the records associated with the accounts. Unfortunately, the law has not kept pace with modern life and technologies. Digital assets are treated the same as non-digital ones by the majority of state probate statutes. This has proven unworkable, as the custodians of many online accounts have refused to recognize fiduciaries’ authority over digital assets.
In fairness, electronic communications and accounts are unlike traditional letters and accounts in several ways. As compared to paper letters, lost and even deleted e-mails might be easily located and retrieved from an e mail service provider. A decedent or incapable person might have opened an online account (to access embarrassing content, or a dating service such as Ashley Madison, for example) with the expectation that it would remain private and undiscoverable by anyone, including a fiduciary. Without evidence of the account holder’s intent, it is impossible to know for certain whether the user intended the account to be accessible and not private.
If you become incapable or die, your fiduciaries will become responsible for handling your finances. They will inventory your assets, and they may need to manage or close your financial accounts or business, pay your debts, taxes, and expenses, and distribute your assets to your beneficiaries. In today’s digital world, your fiduciaries need access to your digital assets to do their jobs and to monitor and close your online accounts, protecting them from cyber thieves. (In 2014, alone, $16 billion was stolen from 12.7 million identity fraud victims in the United States!)
In the past, fiduciaries responsible for managing assets of and for others could easily marshal, collect and manage the assets. Often, the biggest nuisance was convincing a recalcitrant financial institution to honor a power of attorney, and personal representatives and conservators, armed with court decrees, encountered few problems. That has changed, because digital assets can be encrypted, secured by passwords that die with you, or protected by federal and state data privacy and anti-hacking laws.
Even if the fiduciary can find a password, the account provider’s terms-of-service agreement (TOSA) might forbid account access by anyone except the account holder—implicitly barring a fiduciary from access. Online TOSAs are frequently silent as to postmortem options, and often simply prohibit postmortem transfer. See the compendium of a myriad of TOSA provisions, maintained at https://www.mylennium.com/domaininfo.
To ensure your beneficiaries and fiduciaries can access your digital assets, either to preserve and distribute them, or to destroy them for you, your Power of Attorney and estate planning documents must indicate what you wish to happen to your digital assets. To that end, your estate planning attorney will ask you about your digital and online accounts and will include appropriate provisions in your will, trust and power of attorney documents. Without your express consent in your documents, your family and fiduciaries may be unable to access your accounts, even if you have used a password manager or shared your access information with them. If you use encryption to secure your data, wherever it is stored, you must assume that your fiduciary will be unable to break it, and plan accordingly.
- See more at: http://www.natlawreview.com/article/estate-planning-enters-digital-age .fpMnFGBQ.dpuf

See Copyright and Author info at top of page.

One reality of modern life is our increasing reliance on digital information and services. It’s difficult to take and then order prints of photographs, accumulate travel rewards, book travel, so

How can you tap into your retirement savings without the risk of outliving it?
05/09/2016

How can you tap into your retirement savings without the risk of outliving it?

Most people overestimate how much they can withdraw each year....

Retirement Blind Spot 5: Not asking for help.
04/15/2016

Retirement Blind Spot 5: Not asking for help.

Your DIY (do it yourself) retirement should start with help from someone else.

Call me to find out more !  408 - 442 - 4446
04/06/2016

Call me to find out more ! 408 - 442 - 4446

The Genesys Works – Bay Area Board of Directors and San Jose Mayor, Sam Liccardo invite you to the launch of GWBA’s third Bay Area training center in San Jose. Join us in celebrating the expansion of our programs and bringing life-changing opportunities to the youth of San Jose. The event will begin…

Don’t have a pension? You’re not alone.  What steps are you taking to secure your retirement income?
04/04/2016

Don’t have a pension? You’re not alone. What steps are you taking to secure your retirement income?

Keeping track of all of the special things in your life is important to me. A free Facebook app called Hearsay helps so ...
04/04/2016

Keeping track of all of the special things in your life is important to me. A free Facebook app called Hearsay helps so I don’t lose sight of them. Click the picture or link below to help me stay in touch with you.

Click this link to install the free Social Updates app to Facebook to help me stay in touch with you.

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