Yes they do. But not because they have to, but because as you said it's widely spread and accepted. Mostly to prevent fraud. As far as i am aware there is no law in EEA and US at the moment to force IAAS to do
KYC, apart for the one that might pass in the US.
We don't have our own ASN at the moment. We rent bare metal and setup our own virtualization on top of that.
We have some servers in the US. We have servers in US, Canada and the EU. It would be a shame to have to get ride of the US server but if that is what it takes then we'll do it. We could also get rid of the US entity.
If you can link me the laws and official texts that force IAAS to do KYC i'd be happy to be proven wrong. You're certainly right that i don't know the "options you may have when proper corporate structure in favorable jurisdictions is set-up." which is why i was posting here.
As far as we've looked into it, it is an everchanging system but there is no obligation as of now. I know that it will get harder and harder, to offer non KYC services however this is our niche and business model, so it is not an option to do KYC. Our business is setup with regulatory requirements, which are none at the moment. As it has been confirmed by accountant when we looked into
Singapore, it would also be possible there for now with receipt instead of invoices. I agree with you that it's not likely to stay that way for very long, however we have no choice but to keep trying to find a friendly environment.
I see but as the hosting business even if it is the last is still leasing without kyc wouldn't it still count as a reseller and be under the new law as soon as someone start looking?
does anyone knows any good All-in-one solution for incorporating and baking in Iceland, Switzerland, Liechtenstein ? Which seems to be the location i see recommended the most.