Beta

FAQ

Common questions about Computing Legacy - how it works, security, assets, and getting started.

How It Works

What triggers the inheritance transfer?

You set an inactivity period when you set up your plan - for example, 12 months. If your wallet shows no on-chain activity for that duration, the smart contract automatically executes and transfers assets to your beneficiaries. You can reset the timer at any time by making any transaction or using the check-in function in the app.

What counts as "activity"?

Any on-chain transaction from your wallet - sending ETH, interacting with a contract, or using the Computing Legacy check-in function. Normal wallet usage keeps your plan active. You can also check in directly through the app without moving any funds.

Can I update or cancel my plan?

Yes, you have full control at any time. Add or remove beneficiaries, change allocations, adjust your inactivity period, or cancel the plan entirely - all from the dashboard. Changes take effect immediately on-chain.

What are programmable timelocks?

Timelocks let you add time-based delays to large withdrawals from your wallet. Even if your private key is compromised, a timelock gives you a window to detect the unauthorized activity and respond from a backup address before the funds leave.

Security & Trust

What happens if 10102 shuts down?

Your inheritance plan keeps running exactly as programmed. The smart contract operates independently on Ethereum - no server, no company key, no way to stop it. This is the core design principle. 10102 ceasing to exist has zero effect on deployed contracts.

Are the smart contracts audited?

Yes. All Computing Legacy contracts are independently audited and fully open source on GitHub. Anyone can inspect the code, verify the audit reports, and confirm exactly how the contracts behave.

Can 10102 access or freeze my funds?

No. 10102 holds no admin keys and has no ability to access, pause, modify, or freeze your assets or your inheritance plan. Once deployed, the contract runs autonomously with no backdoors.

Can anyone else change my plan?

Only the wallet owner can modify a plan. Not 10102, not your beneficiaries, not anyone else. Beneficiaries can only claim after the inactivity condition is met - they cannot trigger or modify the plan beforehand.

Is my beneficiary list private?

On-chain data is public by nature - transactions and contract interactions are visible on Ethereum. Computing Legacy includes an account ID feature that lets proxies or watchers (like a lawyer) monitor a contract without knowing the owner's wallet address, which preserves some privacy for professional arrangements.

Assets & Compatibility

Which assets are supported?

ETH and ERC-20 tokens on Ethereum Mainnet. NFT (ERC-721) support is on the roadmap. You can assign specific tokens or allocate percentages of your portfolio to different beneficiaries.

Which wallets are compatible?

MetaMask, WalletConnect, Ledger, Trezor, Rainbow, Coinbase Wallet, Magic Eden, and any ENS-supported wallet. If it connects to Ethereum dApps, it works with Computing Legacy.

Is there a minimum amount required?

No minimum. You pay standard Ethereum gas fees to set up and modify plans - there is no additional fee charged by 10102 during beta.

Does it work with hardware wallets?

Yes. Ledger and Trezor are both supported via WalletConnect. Using a hardware wallet is actually recommended for significant holdings - it adds an extra layer of security for your inheritance plan.

Beneficiaries

How do beneficiaries claim the assets?

Once the inactivity condition is met, beneficiaries can claim directly through the Computing Legacy app using their own Ethereum wallet. No special technical knowledge is required beyond having a wallet.

Do beneficiaries need a crypto wallet?

Yes - they need an Ethereum wallet to receive and access the transferred assets. It is worth setting this up with your beneficiaries in advance and ensuring they know how to use it.

Can I have multiple beneficiaries with different allocations?

Yes. You can designate unlimited beneficiaries and specify exact percentage allocations. You can also assign specific tokens or NFTs to specific people, and set up tiered inheritance with primary and backup beneficiaries.

What if a beneficiary wallet becomes inaccessible?

This is exactly why tiered inheritance matters. You can designate backup beneficiaries who receive assets if the primary beneficiary cannot or does not claim within a set period. Plan for this when setting up your inheritance.

Getting Started

Can I test it before committing real assets?

Yes - and you should. Sepolia testnet has full feature parity with Mainnet, free test ETH from faucets, and inactivity periods configurable in minutes instead of months. Test your complete plan end-to-end before going live with real assets.

How long does setup take?

Under 10 minutes. Connect your wallet, add beneficiaries, set your inactivity period, review, and deploy. Your plan is live on Ethereum immediately after the transaction confirms.

How much does it cost?

Computing Legacy is free to use during beta. You pay standard Ethereum gas fees for on-chain transactions - setup, check-ins, and modifications. 10102 does not charge any additional fees during the beta period.

Where can I find the documentation?

Full documentation is available at docs.10102.io. It covers setup guides, contract architecture, security model, and advanced configuration.

Ready to set up your inheritance plan?