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Ask Slashdot: Dividing Digital Assets In Divorce?

An anonymous reader writes "I am a long time Slashdotter and currently find myself in the beginning of a divorce process. How have you dealt with dispersing of shared data, accounts and things online in such a situation? Domains, hosting, email, sensitive data backups and social media are just a few examples."

25 of 458 comments (clear)

  1. Blegh by ModernGeek · · Score: 4, Insightful

    You shouldn't have destroyed your individuality by combining all of these things. If you hadn't, maybe you wouldn't be getting divorced.

    I'm only saying this so that others may learn from your mistake.

    --
    Sig: I stole this sig.
    1. Re:Blegh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Generally true, but things like data backups - that's a little trickier to keep separate. Otherwise the examples given are things that should remain separate (email accounts! Duh!!)

    2. Re:Blegh by ganjadude · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Simple solution here is to have separate backup files of separate data. How hard is it to set the routine to make a backup of "robs documents" and another of "debs documents"?

      --
      have you seen my sig? there are many others like it but none that are the same
    3. Re:Blegh by couchslug · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Bingo. The secret to long relationships is not being mingling everything.

      I've been with the same woman since 1985. All we share is an Ebay account in my name, and if we part it will be immediately terminated.

      I would keep personal copies of ALL data, then go "scorched earth" on everything else. Dump the domains and hosting, splatter formal divorce notices all over all social media in they way they are posted in newspapers (no emotion, just legal facts), and shut down/delete any joint activity. Close all joint accounts, change passwords where appropriate, and in general do "best practices" for employee termination.

        If there are large assets in play, see a lawyer.

      --
      "This post is an artistic work of fiction and falsehood. Only a fool would take anything posted here as fact."
    4. Re:Blegh by foo1752 · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I mean even the RIAA and MPAA isn't going to sue for sharing with your wife.

      Yet.

    5. Re:Blegh by PlatyPaul · · Score: 5, Insightful

      This implies that your spouse is OK with the idea of making these backups in the case of potential divorce.

      Implying that it could/might happen is dangerous, my friend.

      --
      Misery loves company. Online misery loves unsuspecting random strangers.
    6. Re:Blegh by jellomizer · · Score: 3, Insightful

      A good compromise is coming to an agreement where both sides are unhappy.
      Sell them to the highest bidder. Then split the money. If you can't sell it destroy it.

      shared data: Delete it... Or make a duplicate copy of it...
      accounts: Close them and make yourself new ones.
      Domains: Sell it to the highest bidder and split the cash.
      hosting: Copy the data split it if you can, make duplicate copies and delete the rest. Then cancel your hosting.
      email: Shared Emails what are you some type of idiot... Well email everyone with your new email and cancel your old one.
      sensitive data backups: Divide what is yours and what is hers. If you both need it you make a copy of it.
      social media: change your relationship status.

      Being however had asked such a stupid question I would expect what will happen is your ex will get it all. As you are either really dumb or gullible, to share such items... Or you are so dense that you can't realize that digital data can be copied.

      However if you have any common sense you are going to remember to try to be fare with your divorce. If your not, you will be the bad guy.

      --
      If something is so important that you feel the need to post it on the internet... It probably isn't that important.
    7. Re:Blegh by owenferguson · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Because I have other shit to do.

    8. Re:Blegh by Hatta · · Score: 1, Insightful

      If your partner is so self-deluded that they can't imagine they'd be in one of the 50% of marriages that end in divorce, you chose poorly. Mature people understand that things change, people change, and they can grow apart through no fault of anyone. Do you really want to base the most important relationship of your adult life on denial?

      --
      Give me Classic Slashdot or give me death!
    9. Re:Blegh by dgatwood · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Unless you have a preexisting contract to the contrary, the legal rights to a work (copyright) are divided equally among all of the work's creators.

      However, most of your data was not created mutually. Most photos, for example, were taken by one person or the other. In that case, they are actually mere contributions to a collection. Thus, ownership belongs to the person who shot the photo. This is straightforward most of the time, because the other person is usually in the picture. And arguably, if you are both in the picture, unless you used a tripod, someone else probably owns the copyright, though any claim is usually pretty unlikely.

      That said, you can, as a condition of the divorce, contractually transfer all rights into a shared pool such that you both hold 50% rights in every photo. This is probably the easiest solution, assuming either of you cares enough to bother arguing about such a minor point.

      --

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    10. Re:Blegh by trdrstv · · Score: 3, Insightful
      Combining EVERYTHING is a sure fire way to not only lose yourself, but also lose what that other person was attracted to. IMO life needs a careful balance of:

      1) "Family time" - you + her + kids or extended family (parents, cousins, etc...)

      2) "Couple time" - time when it's just you and her.

      3) "Alone time" - when you both are completely separated and "do your own thing".

      There are certain things that we each like that the other doesn't (or doesn't to the same degree). She HATES the cold and I love to ski... doesn't mean I have to give up skiing, I just don't take her with me when I go. Every so often one of us stays home with our son and the other goes out for a "guys night out / girls night out" and I honestly feel we are both the better for it. Being with someone means combining and sharing a multitude of things, but you don't have to lose yourself in the process.

    11. Re:Blegh by Grishnakh · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I have to question that statistic, however. Isn't 50% for ALL marriages? That doesn't apply to everyone. If you're in your first marriage, you don't care how many total marriages end in divorce, you only care how many first marriages end in divorce. I do remember reading that the failure rate for marriages goes up with the marriage number; i.e., the number of failures for 2nd marriages is much higher than first marriages, the number for 3rd marriages is higher still, and 4th marriages, well you might as well not bother if you couldn't make it work with the first three. If you're in your first marriage, you don't care that some losers on their 4th and 5th marriages are almost certain to get another divorce, because that's a different group of people from you. First marriages are the most likely to succeed (not that that number is all that high, but it's still better than the failure rate for all marriages).

    12. Re:Blegh by gauauu · · Score: 5, Insightful

      If your partner is so self-deluded that they can't imagine they'd be in one of the 50% of marriages that end in divorce, you chose poorly. Mature people understand that things change, people change, and they can grow apart through no fault of anyone. Do you really want to base the most important relationship of your adult life on denial?

      There so much sad and self-defeating about that statement that I don't know where to start. When I got married, I made a commitment, a promise, to always love her. Even if I feel tired of her. Even if she's changed. That's not denial, that's mature people realizing that there's a whole lot more joy in working through hard times and ending up with a stronger relationship as a result, than being one the 50% of people who just give up and throw in the towel when it gets hard. I'm not preparing for divorce because I've made a promise that I won't. I intend to keep that promise, even if one of us changes. THAT is what mature people do.

    13. Re:Blegh by DarthBart · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Both of them... unless one of them is a vindictive twat who doesn't want to share something that costs them nothing.

      It's a divorce. By definition someone is going to be a vindictive twat. Every divorce I've seen has been a race to see which party can be the bigger baby.

    14. Re:Blegh by Hatta · · Score: 4, Insightful

      There's nothing sad and self-defeating about being realistic. Saying "it could never happen to me", now THAT's sad and self defeating.

      --
      Give me Classic Slashdot or give me death!
    15. Re:Blegh by AGMW · · Score: 5, Insightful

      (I'm happily married to my first wife, so I have only the experience of others to draw on.)

      Word to the wise, don't let her hear you calling her your first wife!

      --
      Eclectic beats from Leeds, UK
      handmadehands.co.uk
  2. easy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

    burn it on a dvd and call it a day

  3. I'm confused about the backups. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Can't you simply make copies?

    1. Re:I'm confused about the backups. by Derkec · · Score: 5, Insightful

      They're never pretty and are frequently ugly, but really don't have to be all that bad.

      I'm divorced (and now happily re-married!) and while painful, the divorce wasn't ugly. We hired a lawyer together to help us through the paperwork. If you're cheap, there are also forms at Staples. The lawyer was well worth it. I kept most of the furniture and cut my ex a check in return. I had stuff, she had some cash, we were both ok and clear of any alimony claims. I probably could have fought and paid a little less to my ex and a whole lot more to lawyers.

      Remember that at the very least you once loved that other person. Treat eachother with some respect, and part civilly. It's strange when you're called, "a model divorcing couple" but a million times better than going to war.

    2. Re:I'm confused about the backups. by IceNinjaNine · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I'm divorced (and now happily re-married!) and while painful, the divorce wasn't ugly. We hired a lawyer together to help us through the paperwork.

      and

      Remember that at the very least you once loved that other person. Treat eachother with some respect, and part civilly. It's strange when you're called, "a model divorcing couple" but a million times better than going to war.

      Some days I read Slashdot and think "Wow.. sometimes it *is* good to be a geek".. (translated: many of us here have a bit of introspection). It's good to read this. My own divorce (a dissolution actually) was finalized late last year. We were husband and wife techies, and split everything right down the middle. She didn't want the house (being an engineer she wanted mobility for her career), so she received more cash than she normally would have. Are things weird in the aftermath? Yes. Are there hurt feelings? Yes. Do we hate each other? No. That being said, I'm glad we did it.

      Had we gone to war we would have burnt through 15k a piece in legal fees, MINIMUM. Our combined total using one attorney was 2500 bucks. With kids it probably would have gone up by a factor of 2-5x.

      Two things of note to the young'ns out there: I once read that in reality you should be at least 27 years old before marrying (there's some sort of psychological and brain development still occurring up to that point), and if you marry and start to have problems, do NOT do what a few of my moronic (okay, misguided) friends have done and said "Oh, this sucks.. but.. let's have kids and try to make it better." That's right, I've seen it more than once: people think that having kids will be a FIX for a marriage that's not working... and it's not.

  4. Re:Shared data by girlintraining · · Score: 2, Insightful

    If only there were a way to make multiple copies of digital information and not get the pants sued off me.

    FTFY.

    --
    #fuckbeta #iamslashdot #dicemustdie
  5. Re:being able to buy things and share them by TaoPhoenix · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Sorry, this is flawed in a lot of ways.

    In a sense there is no economic advantage between just living together as lovers and being married. One funny example used to be that the standard deductions of one Head of Household and one Single, both triggering on lower overall brackets was cheaper than the married rate on combined income, and other tricks.

    Then there's the very real cost of the alimony/child care process. Guy starts out with house, guy should end up with house. But watch the number of times she gets it.

    Or the kids. Woman starts out poor, woman has a kid, woman divorces two years later, woman keeps kid, woman gets payments GREATER than they would have spent together on the kid being frugal.

    Plus the copyright angle of making "full backups" of database based assets is hysterical.

    --
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  6. Some (possibly obvious) points for you to consider by Fubari · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Some (possibly obvious) points for you to consider:
    If the "digitial assets" have significant monetary value: ask your lawyer. (the "digital assets" probably have low monetary value, or you wouldn't be asking about them here.)
    If the "digitial assets" have significant sentimental value: burn yourself a copy, hand them over to your future-ex, and sincerely say "Thank you for the wonderful memories."

    (Just out of curiosity on my part, what kind of advice did you expect to get without actually describing the nature and value of the "digital assets"?)

    Lastly, consider this: how important is it for you to win?
    Divorces can be ugly. I've seen friends destroy each others sanity and inflict long-term damage on their souls in order to "win" and "be right"
    Five years from now, would you rather be busy enjoying a new chapter in your life or sipping daily from a nasty glass of old & bitter resentments?

  7. Re:being able to buy things and share them by superwiz · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Guy starts out with house, guy should end up with house. But watch the number of times she gets it.

    Even if she gives up a career to raise the guy's children? If there is a specialization of roles in a contractual relationship, then one side may have an advantage if the contract is severed. This is why people sue for breach of contract. Well, marriage is also a contract.

    --
    Any guest worker system is indistinguishable from indentured servitude.
  8. Re:being able to buy things and share them by epyT-R · · Score: 3, Insightful

    depends on the situation. they're his if it benefits her in some way. if it benefits her for them to not be his, then they're not.