Yes it works but it all depends of where are you going to use the documents because not everybody accept them. In the US this kind of stuff are accepted in many places but I don't know about outside
I have not used notarize.com, but in Estonia, anyone can use an online notary for almost a year now. I believe it will expand to other countries in a couple of years, and we will be all using digital signatures soon. It's even possible to buy real estate remotely.
I use NotaryCam to notarize and apostille documents and never had an issue. Sometimes when they can't do the job I physically mail my documents to Apostille Please, who can apostille just about anything. They then mail the documents back to me or mail to whatever entity needs the documents.
Sometimes I get questions about why I as a non-American use US notaries/apostilles, but it hasn't even been a problem. It's usually much easier to use these online services for legalizing documents than to legalize documents locally. In some places I visit frequently it's almost impossible to legalize documents without being a citizen, or︀ they won't legalize foreign documents. The USA legalizes just about anything, regardless of where the︁ documents originate from.
Yes, they can. Just sign up for an account, upload your document, and then see if they will notarize it. You don't pay until after they've notarized the document. So there's no harm in trying. If they can't notarize it then you won't get charged.
I tried tocontact them twice by email and never get reply. The team on the web site has no complete name. This is very strange for a notary or lawyer. impossible to know if they are on the register. Nobody are registered in notaries list in Limasol with the name Neofitos. It smell bad
Sole director of Ydros Management Ltd is Cezary Zieniuk, who just so happens to be the sole director of IBCCS Tax Ltd as well.
It's a small detail but there technically is no such thing as a notary under Cypriot law. The term you're looking︀ for is certifying officer, but for marketing purposes I can understand why you'd want︁ to use a more common term. I guess "MyCertifyingOfficer" doesn't quite have the same ring︂ to it.