Fred said:
If you go with big banks like Emirates NBD or OCBC - both banking 0% tax jurisdictions - they provide you simple retail banking and don't have to ask you for every single transaction.
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11111 said:
He just put the URL he wants traffic to, pay in btc or monero, and traffic is being sent to this URL.
I get the btc or monero payments.
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11111 said:
But what will banks think of the fact that while I have legit business model, there is no identified customer at the other end? Just an automated service?
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I as a human being would've already accepted that. And if I was a bank, I'd have too.Martin Everson said:
Is this really what you want to tell the bank is the SOF. You think a normal human being will accept this let alone a regulated bank?
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Would you please specify what details and what kind of proof they want to know about the transactions?Gediminas said:
I partially disagree with that.
@11111 don't be surprised when compliance dep will pop up with questions about your transactions. 😉 It might happen at the later stage of the relationship with the bank. But it will happen.
The days are long gone when banks had no questions. Due to nowadays regulations, it's just impossible. Banks would not survive. UAE doesn't want to become blacklisted jurisdiction. No questions asked = AML risks.
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What's illegal about it?Sols said:
What you're doing is a violation of the terms and conditions of YouTube and other social media platform. This puts you at risk of litigation or otherwise being shut down, which puts your entire business at risk. This in turn makes you a high-risk client for the bank.
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I didn't say it was illegal to sell views/followers on social media. But it is a violation of the terms of service which makes a business at risk of lawsuits or being shut down/shut out (tanking the business), which is why banks and payment processors don't like working with businesses like that.
What's illegal about it?Sols said:
I didn't say it was illegal to sell views/followers on social media. But it is a violation of the terms of service which makes a business at risk of lawsuits or being shut down/shut out (tanking the business), which is why banks and payment processors don't like working with businesses like that.
If you run a high-risk business (whether it's just dodgy, or straight up illegal), you need to structure it in a way that works for the financial institutions whose services you wish to use.
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Based on my personal experience with Citi AE, a bank transfer from Cyprus company & bank to personal Citi account for the amount a bit below €500.000 came without any questions asked this year. Obviously I have all documentation in place but it triggered no alert on a fairly new (with almost no activity) bank account. I had a similar experience with DBS SG.Gediminas said:
I partially disagree with that.
@11111 don't be surprised when compliance dep will pop up with questions about your transactions. 😉 It might happen at the later stage of the relationship with the bank. But it will happen.
The days are long gone when banks had no questions. Due to nowadays regulations, it's just impossible. Banks would not survive. UAE doesn't want to become blacklisted jurisdiction. No questions asked = AML risks.
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I think you're having a hard time. Nobody said it's fully illegal, but does YouTube like to see people selling views? No, definitely not. It doesn't make it illegal, but YouTube could try to harm your business and this will probably be bad for you as a seller. The guy above is receiving BTC and Monero. Therefore I'd say that his project is more or less anonymous. There is probably never an investigation, but YouTube could still sue you. This doesn't necessarily harm your business, but it could hit the buyers as YouTube starts suspending or stopping to pay or whatever. There's lots of legally built sites for buying views with PayPal and credit card payment option. I wouldn't say it's totally safe to sell views, but it shouldn't be a business full of risks. Obviously, still hard to get bank accounts to support that.
What about VPN providers? Or mail providers with stronger encryption than usual? Most of them have complex business setups or use multiple countries, but there's also providers like Protonmail with crypto payment option. But I've still seen a lot of other pro-privacy mail providers with no crypto payment option. It's a risk thing I guess.Martin Everson said:
Is this really what you want to tell the bank is the SOF. You think a normal human being will accept this let alone a regulated bank?
You honestly think a bank will get as far as this line of questioning after you mentioned btc and monero in first part?
No credible bank is going to risk their bank being sanctioned working with a client using an anonymous payment system and anonymous customers in 2021. You are basically Osama Bin Laden to the compliance officer with your setup.
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I think you're having a hard time. Where have I said "fully illegal"?Saho said:
I think you're having a hard time. Nobody said it's fully illegal, but does YouTube like to see people selling views? No, definitely not. It doesn't make it illegal,
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That's what I'm talking about.BlueMist said:
Based on my personal experience with Citi AE, a bank transfer from Cyprus company & bank to personal Citi account for the amount a bit below €500.000 came without any questions asked this year. Obviously I have all documentation in place but it triggered no alert on a fairly new (with almost no activity) bank account. I had a similar experience with DBS SG.
I guess they don't care for peanuts amounts like this.
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Fred said:
Of course they have to ask questions but not for the peanuts amounts in the 6 figures - that's why I always mention the sums you transfer have to fit the economy of the country.
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Fred said:
Compare this with Banks in Belize, Dominica and Vanuatu and they ask you for tons of documents simply because the jurisdiction itself is a red flag because everything above 5.000-10.000 EUR doesn't fit into the profile of the economy in Belize, Dominica and Vanuatu.
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