On Sun, 2014-07-20 at 14:28 +0100, Adam Spiers wrote:
*snip*
The downside is of course that it's a far less proven approach, so
there's probably a lot more risk something would go wrong than with
the traditional solicitor/will mechanism.
You could combine some approaches here with a traditional will. E.g.
have a password store that you can keep up to date but have a copy of
the key kept safe by your solicitor.
There is risk there too, but at least you'll have someone to drag
through the courts if that key *isn't* kept safe ;)