I built this platform after realizing my own family could struggle to locate and manage my digital assets if something happened to me unexpectedly.

Built from lived experience across Romania and Indonesia, focused on online-first assets, and designed for cross-border family realities.
My name is Stefan-Iulian Tesoi. I am a software developer and entrepreneur, commuting between Romania and Indonesia. Most of my assets are digital: bank and investment accounts, crypto, startup exposure through SAFEs (Simple Agreement for Future Equity), online projects, and domains.
During the family reunification visa process for my wife, I spent time in Romania while she was in Indonesia, handling paperwork through the Romanian Embassy in Jakarta. That period made one issue impossible to ignore: if I died suddenly while traveling or working abroad, my family would not know where everything is or how to recover it.
My wife understood the big picture, but not every account-level detail. My mother, brothers, and sister had even less visibility. Without clear instructions, they could face a long legal and administrative process while essential funds and online operations remained inaccessible.
I also run long-term online projects, including an online museum dedicated to Indonesian art and culture. I wanted continuity, not silence. Memento Mori Email started as my answer to that problem.
Cross-border life creates fragmented assets, multiple platforms, and hidden points of failure.
Visa logistics and international separation exposed how fragile undocumented digital estates can be.
A secure, structured way to pass critical information to trusted people when timing matters most.
Step 1
Document critical accounts, platforms, and projects in a single structured place.
Step 2
Set clear instructions so each person gets only what they need.
Step 3
Replace guesswork with a practical digital inheritance plan built for real life.
I built it because my own family faced real uncertainty around cross-border digital assets. I wanted a system that turns vague awareness into actionable instructions.
People with online-first lives: digital nomads, international couples and families, entrepreneurs, and anyone with accounts and assets spread across multiple services or countries.
No. It complements legal planning. You should still align your digital plan with your will, trust, and local legal process.
Read the legal and privacy foundations: Privacy Policy and Terms of Service.
Continue with practical guides: Digital Legacy Planning Guide and How to Prepare Your Digital Life for the Inevitable.
Start now so trusted people have clarity, not confusion, when life is unpredictable.