Managing your Digital Legacy: The Cloud Afterlife Problem: "No Right of Survivorship and Non-Transferability. You agree that your Yahoo! Account is non-transferable and any rights to your Yahoo! ID or contents within your account terminate upon your death. Upon receipt of a copy of a death certificate, your account may be terminated and all contents therein permanently deleted" [Yahoo!, Terms of Service]. The issue of what happens to your online accounts and data in the cloud once you are no longer able to access them is new territory [1]. Each Internet user has an average of twenty-six different online accounts and uses roughly ten different passwords in a day. Each person may therefore have a variety of digital assets in the online world. (Reference: [1] J. P. Hopkins, "Afterlife in the Cloud: Managing a Digital Estate," Hastings Science and Technology Law Journal, Vol. 5:2, 2013, pp. 209-244.) Description: To support such change in our day-to-day life, it is important that traditional estate planning services adapt to these new challenges. Wills, however, are not the ideal method for dealing with digital assets because wills eventually become public. Passwords, accounts, and usernames should therefore never be placed into a will. Furthermore, the rapid changes in digital assets could render a will's provisions invalid or out-of-date before an individual has a chance to redraft the will. The objective of this project is therefore to create a website and management system which has capability to allow a user to self-manage their online assets for ease of their control after the account holder's death. Constraints: This project will involve the development of a suitable website front-end interface using the HTML5, CSS3 and JavaScript programming languages, through which a client may enter their account details. System activity will be supplemented with the use of a back-end database into which the data will be stored and managed, and eventually transferred to their next of kin.