Post
Topic
Board Scam Accusations
Re: Possible Exit Scam - Advantage Blockchain
by
holydarkness
on 08/01/2023, 21:01:52 UTC
Hi holydarkness,

It seems you're stuck on the securities registration, we are NOT offering securities for investment deals, but rather equity to private Angels.

Thanks
Spencer

Oh? Why don't you said so from the earliest part of our discussion? It'll help us saving a lot of time... wait... maybe that's because you had to improvise and blurt it out just now.

I've been deliberately mentioned IPO several times in our earlier discussion for you to deny them, like here or here, as well as mentioning public offering, partial ownership, etc., i've even brought the screenshot of registered company for public offering --which, honest to god, also placed to give you a chance to informnus that we're on a different page and you've never talking about security offering. You have plenty of time to deny and straighten by saying "no, not a security offering, I am talking about an angel investor." Wjich you never did, until all of your means of excuse seemingly exhausted.

But let's assume you did tried to say angel investors and all this time you just, uhh... not, uhh... --I don't kow a nicer way to spell it, so forgive in advance-- not smart enough to realize everybody understood you wrongly, that you're talking about angel investor and we are all thinking about something entirety different but you can't see it so you can't clarify it before this point.

In crypto, angel investors are those who usually offered to seed, and invested, on a private round. But as you've been publicly opening yourself for token sale, I don't think it's meant to be for private round, nor did you actually referring to angel investor all this time.

Then, let's assume you're trying to say angel investor in traditional terms, the good old school business philantropic partner. As you stated here that the deal was signed by lawyer,

Hi holydarkness,

You make a lot of assumptions. Already some % of the corporation has been sold and the legal papers reviewed and signed by real lawyers on the investor's end and our end.

And it isn't clear where you are getting a lot of your information from. You absolutely do not need to be a part of a brokerage to invest in a corporation in Canada.

Which I strongly believe you're trying to say notary, basically a lawyer who oversee a deal and became a legal witness of the said deal being signed. The keyword here is "legal witness" as they're required to be present on the same room as the other parties and see the ink being drawn. By this basis, I'll boldly assume the "angel investor" here is also a Canadian, because I can't fathom how an overseas angel investor would fly in with their notary --or you fly with your notary-- to legalize the deal.

Provincial securities commissions regulate who can make angel investments. If you don't have a personal relationship with the company or its owners, you may become an accredited investor. In finance, an accredited investor is an individual with a high net worth, which qualifies them to invest in hedge funds and venture capital or make angel investments. To meet the requirement for accredited investors, you typically require a net asset value of more than $5 million and a gross income of $200,000 for at least two years.

You're saying that all this time, since you created your ann up to this point, you tried to propose either your family or someone random in this forum who happen to be a high profile someone with $5M net worth?