I got the impression that Bestchange has changed hands, and that it is now managed by someone who is not particularly concerned about their potential influence on the spread of scams.
They lowered the criteria quite low.
You could actually be right. Something feels different from the old Bestchange approach, and the way some of these exchangers are listed leaves a lot of question marks. Some of the exchangers don't even have any necessary public information like operating licenses displayed on their websites, and yet they somehow end up getting listed. If we are to go by the strict KYC/AML protocol that Bestchange aim to operate with in, then there is still a big loopehole for even scams taking up people's documents and money in the name of KYC