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> Setting up a company is not that easy as you might think.

In Ian Carroll's EV experiments it cost him $177 and took 48 hours, to create a new company named "Stripe" in the US and get an EV certificate for it.

So, a lot easier than getting tickets to see a popular musical, but not as easy as buying a McDonalds burger. Is that what you had in mind with "not that easy as you might think" ?

Both the US and the UK have a _lot_ of what are called "brass plate" companies, that is the company doesn't really exist in that country at all, it's just a name plate (made of brass usually) on the wall at some cheap lawyer's office. The real owners of the business will usually never have even visited the country, none of their real assets are present, they just have a legal presence to achieve some other purpose. Setting these up costs under $100 each if you know what you're doing.

I would assume that's a real PayPal web site because PayPal are notoriously bad at this stuff and it's the sort of bone-headed thing they'd do. But if my mother asked about it I'd sigh and suggest she tries the actual PayPal.com and see if there's a link to this "prepaid card" idea from their site. That link might be bad too (PayPal are terrible enough at this that they've done idiot things like advertise sites actually run by scammers because they didn't realise those sites weren't theirs...) but it's the best she can really expect to do when dealing with PayPal.



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