We're to trust you not to keep them? Nope, not going to happen. No one in their right mind would trust an unknown 3rd party with full access.
I take it you don't use any trading websites, and are part of the unbanked population. And you probably have no interest in BitBills for the same reason. Sure, if you know nothing about me and have no reason to trust me, that's a fair assessment, but others do know enough about me and consider knowing my real identity a positive factor in favor of trusting me, and...
No offense, but this seems like a clear money-grab since the keys are a one-time use.
...please avoid calling me a thief based on this sloppy non-sequitur. What does one-time-use have to do with your assumption that this is an attempt to steal? How many people in this community have I done business with, and how many have I stolen from?
Or the modified bitcoin client.
Just seems like a half baked idea stolen from bitbills.
Ahh, the notion that I'm stealing something. What, exactly? By the way, Bitbills are a great product, if you are willing to wait 3 months to order some. And Bitbills are a legit product too - I have bought some, and redeemed most of them, and can attest that every Bitbill I redeemed contains exactly the balance it said it did. I trust Bitbills enough that I am holding a significant balance on one and not my computer (1QEk8SCapWttMxSjes5gWm3MtL3MSZcSAN). Now how exactly am I stealing from Bitbills? Doug (@bitbills)? Am I stealing from you?
The only other noteworthy difference is that your cost per address is lower with my offering than on a Bitbill, which probably is related to the fact that Bitbills - given that they're meant to be durable and protect the private key from snooping - take much more to produce.