Yes.
Investors get added to the Shareholder registry. Which is a private document that contains all the official shareholders of the corporation.
Oh, come on, up to this point, you've successfully convince me that you actually didn't have the permit, you keep deflecting the question, answering even the simplest one with something else. I'll go down and matching your words of choice: do your company
registered in Canadian equity regulator?
But based on your statement above, I doubt it is, as you seems to be the one didn't know how a public offering and shareholding works. Shareholder registry is not meant to be private, it should be open for public; at least that's how it works in my country, as well as bases on these articles:
A third-party registry service provider is tasked with maintaining and updating the register at an agreed fee. Since the shareholder register is a public document, third parties and other interested parties can access an updated list of a companys shareholders at any time.
According to the Companies Act 2006, anyone can ask to look at and request a copy of a companys shareholder register.
Its not just the companys shareholders who have a right to inspect the register, members of the public can request to see it too.
But, of course, just like before, I might be wrong, Canada might have a different set of rules. So why don't you quote us the rule that state otherwise?
These questions are simple, your contract lawyer can help you answer them in seconds, so please make sure you have a direct answer for both questions on your next reply, or I'll be convinced that you're suspicious enough that I'd have to raise a flag to warn people. Especially as your "new whitepaper launch" did not exactly shed a new and important information
compared to the previous one.
Discord server now 99% set.
Ranks added to Server.
800-900 Members.
Active chat.
New Whitepaper Ann: Jan 7 2023
New whitepaper
archived