too bad for someone with serious uncurrable trust issues 😀
Trust is earned. Start small and grow.
check out Bisqvoid said:
Anyone can recommend non-KYC (yet legit) service that allows SEPA transfer and immediate withdrawal? 4 figures per transaction, BTC only
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I know about Bisq of course but I'm specifically interested in dealing with business
A registered company is forced by law to KYC you, you won't find a registered company that sells without doing any KYC.void said:
I wonder what seriously stops companies selling BTC b2c like any other goods of similar nature (software licenses, electronic content, ...)
I know about Bisq of course but I'm specifically interested in dealing with business
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in which countries? which law?diatessaron said:
A registered company is forced by law to KYC you, you won't find a registered company that sells without doing any KYC.
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mind you share more detail? thx369 said:
there are polish companies who are allowed to exchange without KYC 1k eur per transaction up to 10k eur/day
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10k per transaction is no issuelatindev said:
I know a company in Panama who does it, they won't do KYC to you but they will first investigate the addresses from where the BTCs are going to be sent but if I'm not wrong they limit it to 10k so maybe is not what you're looking for
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Governments tell exchanges to collect KYC information or go to jail. So they do. There are unlicensed exchanges like the people in this thread who will ignore these rules and take legal risk in return for a higher fee. Not sure what else to tell you.void said:
mind you share more detail? thx
I'm still confused by the "allowed" part... why would a private (let say European) company be disallowed to buy and sell BTC (no matter if as a primary or side business)? what law forbids this?
it's no currency exchange, no securities trading, no gambling, no regulated investment tool as defined by law, what's the problem?
10k per transaction is no issue
I'm primarily talking about buy BTC here is no reason to investigate a fresh address...
no reason to investigate the funds used for the purchase - your car dealer doesn't ask you as well
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exchanges hold money and crypto of customers in custody and they are not selling their own crypto (unless they are market making themselves)reallyawesome1111 said:
Governments tell exchanges to collect KYC information or go to jail. So they do. There are unlicensed exchanges like the people in this thread who will ignore these rules and take legal risk in return for a higher fee. Not sure what else to tell you.
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OECD and any country that listens to FATF disagrees with your understanding. There's nothing you can do about it other than use more unofficial exchangers or move to a place where there are less rules about this kind of thing.void said:
exchanges hold money and crypto of customers in custody and they are not selling their own crypto (unless they are market making themselves)
private company selling its own BTC in stock (purchased before like any other goods) to an end customer and invoicing him is a way different story... don't you think so?
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They have a licence to exchange.Based on local law its no KYC needed to 10k eur per day however they also limited it to 1k eur per transaction this year.I'm still confused by the "allowed" part... why would a private (let say European) company be disallowed to buy and sell BTC (no matter if as a primary or side business)? what law forbids this?
it's no currency exchange, no securities trading, no gambling, no regulated investment tool as defined by law, what's the problem?
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localcryptos.com and localmonero.co are both legit servies I have used myself, are non-KYC, and I can vouch for