Running Rebills from Bolivia



The credit card or payment processor...the real problem with rebill regulations isn't the protecting hte company from legal problems, its keeping the payments coming through the complaints and regulations when most of the world uses visa and mastercard.

quoted for truth

if you're running a scam in high enough volume to make it worthwhile, you'll get buried in chargebacks and lose the funds in the mids..
 
good morning again gents,

to reply;

Why don't you just go all the way

Republic of Minerva - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Their downfall was upsetting a tribal group on a neighboring island.. who rowed over and kicked their ass.
actually no. 'their' downfall was that surrounding islands didn't not acknowledge their claim of sovereignty. these guys bought a plot of land and began 'building a country' without any sort of UN/MLAT correspondence. so yeah, neighboring nations then sent out a few rafts and annexed the property back.
OP: If anyone's tried what you're talking about, they're not going to tell you about it here.
i suppose.
Retards should be ostrasized at conferences and banned from wickedfire. That is all

Evelyn why do you feel the need to be such a retard? Did you really think this thread was going to yield anything productive? Just fucking kill yourself. No one is going to tell you how to run your business ffs
i'm not seeking business advice. if you've noticed i already confirmed the business to be set up. i'm curious about policy at local level. this forum has 10k+ members? perhaps a couple have experience :)
He's talking about making a permanent relocation, to exclusively relocate to countries without a US extradition policy, for pretty much the rest of his life, in exchange for presumable fortunes after a pretty arduous amount of work [while, I agree, he could probably make more, legally, without leaving his couch]. In other words, OP is a dumbass, but no, this is not like slinging rocks.
i can't really see how an office desk in bolivia equals me being relocated there in person...? the people who work there will remain there yes. they don't plan on leaving either way.
A company I worked for was getting constantly DDOS'd by a bunch of pricks out of Turkey. My boss went to Turkey, and withdrew $15000 in cash there. He spent $800 to find the guy's physical address from the ISP, and $12000 bribing the police to arrest him and hold him on bogus charges. The moral of the story: If you fuck someone over enough, someone with the will and means to find you, no corner of the Earth will be safe. You think the third world gives you legal immunity? Sure, but there is NOWHERE that give you immunity from the cold, hard cash of your enemies.
forgive any ignorance, but i just don't see anyone at harpo booking a ticket to santa cruz to come and harass locals. more likely they'd be the ones returning stripped-naked back to the states. i'm not sure why people in turkey betrayed a countryman like that. perhaps they didn't like the person to begin with. in south america the owners of factories are seen as fathers of communities. they will protect the factory.

i know such goodwill can be swayed with enough dollar bills, but tbh i see the bill holder being ripped much more likely than a countryman being ratted out. if they have a job and their community is being developed, people who live in bolivia aren't exactly desperate to relocate to New York, ya dig?
The credit card or payment processor...the real problem with rebill regulations isn't the protecting hte company from legal problems, its keeping the payments coming through the complaints and regulations when most of the world uses visa and mastercard.
true. i have a contact there with his own bank. a direct card-issuing savings bank. not merely a 'financial services' broker. most of his intl. business revolves around casino solutions, and he's holding up good... the only issue is that afaik rebills have a greater, much greater chargeback rate than casinos. at a casino there will be unhappy people or the occasional crook/guilt motive etc. but with rebills if i was a consumer myself i'd say everyone who got billed for something like that would want to charge the payments back. it's huge, and something tells me even a bank with card monopoly in their country won't be able to resist visa/mc muscle :( this is something to have a deeper talk about.
Well, you basically are guaranteeing you'll never be able to re-enter the USA without being slapped with a subpoena.
perhaps ^^ i am not currently residing in the us either, though.

PS: to add... i won't be hiring 'random' folks there. i am from south america myself, though not bolivian. i have family there now who operate well-employed land maintenance businesses, which is where i base my experience from regarding employment relations.
 
Not exactly. They're both "criminal" activities. That's apples to apples. The point is, why go through all that trouble to do something illegal when you can make just as much money, or more, doing something completely legit? Not to mention, it will probably be easier AND you'll sleep easier every night.

Oh, and P.S.



Spoken with true class.

Shhhhhhhh!

Don't listen to him guys, you can only make money by pushing rebill scams. :338:
 
Bolivia eh?

Well you'll be fine till one of your employers snitches, or worst let local goons know the deal, than guess what? EXTORTION TIME.
 
it must be said that a few of you are stuck with western prejudice :) look at zimbabwe and south africa. white farmers being chased out, stolen from by their own staff etc, extorted for salaries and so on. but once the black farmer takes over that ground and runs it with those same employees themselves, where has the drama gone? instead, the employees protect that farm from neighboring farms now, as if it was a small village of their own.

*shrug* i suppose this is simply not the right place to inquire about something like this.

open the doors to the world guys :) opportunity lies outside*

*not a url