Your post demonstrates your weak critical thinking abilities. You poorly present an aspect of the system as a flaw while it is you who fails to understand the spectrum of capabilities of the DigiPulse platform. I would like to kindly ask you to remove your post since it is utterly wrong. Had you taken the time to read my post, you would have already had the chance to improve your poor knowledge about DigiPulse.
The system does not assume anything. It executes what you want it to execute. If part of the desired execution is leaving a manual for inheritors, then the system will do so if you told the system to do so. If you fail to tell the system to do so, then you failed and not the system. I guess this is food for thought for you while for others it is just simple logic.
If you have bothered to read the intended use of the project you will see it is a perfectly valid flaw that needs addressing. This project will allow crypto coins to be pass on to rightful inheritors. If they don't know what they are inheriting what is the use? Ask someone on the street if they want 100 dollars or 100 ethereum, they will probably take dollars not knowing what ethereum is. It can easily be improved by linking to extra info explaining what they are inheriting.
I think you want too much from DigiPulse.
Imagine that you left a car to a person who can not drive. Who should teach him how to drive?
Or that you left BTC to a six-year-old child - is it supposed that DigiPulse should grow him and teach to use crypto?
About Nigeria... Spam and fraud are common problems. It is impossible to ask DigiPulse to solve all the problems in the world.
A car can sit in the garage until someone takes it, but coins will be lost in the blockchain if unclaimed. The holder should give it to someone who knows how to claim it or digipulse can offer further guidance to the claimer. Perhaps this is a way to expand the business - offering guidance to those inheriting the coins.