<p dir="ltr">General you need a member of the organization leadership to reside in those countries or some operations physically there.</p>
<p dir="ltr">Since TB doesn't have an office and at least the suggested idea after summit was regular elections it seems like this would not work very well in Thunderbird's case.</p>
<p dir="ltr">Anyways there really is no issue with nonprofits in the U.S. unless you run a poorly managed nonprofit.</p>
<p dir="ltr">Has TB Council even approached Mozilla legal to ask:</p>
<p dir="ltr">A) whether formation of a nonprofit using the Thunderbird wordmark would be allowed?<br>
B) whether Mozilla is OK letting community form a separate entity and licensing the TB IP to that organization?<br><br><br></p>
<p dir="ltr">On Jul 13, 2015 1:05 PM, "R Kent James" <<a href="mailto:kent@caspia.com">kent@caspia.com</a>> wrote:<br>
><br>
> As discussed previously, one of the options for moving forward with Thunderbird fund raising would be to register a separate organization to receive those funds. I've talked about that being a user coop, but for purposes of this email that is not important, just that it be a new, independent registration.<br>
><br>
> Given the current issues with non-profit status in the US, one possibility is to register an organization in one of several countries that are designed to be low-cost centers for corporate registrations. Many of these countries now support registration of "Foundations" in their laws, and the usages that these Foundations may be dedicated to are much more flexible than US law.<br>
><br>
> Our usage of such a country would be actually quite legitimate, namely we have an organization without any particular country as the obvious center of operations, so we might as well pick the country of registration with the lowest cost. But a common use of these countries are for activities that are considered sketchy in larger countries, like moving your assets to another country so that your soon-to-be divorced spouse cannot access them in the divorce settlement, or hiding the proceeds of your corrupt government position.<br>
><br>
> My question is this: does anyone have any particular experiences with organizations based in these countries, either positive, negative, or neutral? I would be interested in 1) just your initial reaction when you hear that an organization is registered in a particular country, and 2) any specific experiences that you have had in financial transactions with those countries.<br>
><br>
> Examples of countries of interest (with appropriate Foundation laws) would be : Isle of Man, Panama, Bahamas, Jersey, Belize, Liechtenstein. (I am not accusing any specific country of hosting sketchy activities, so if you are affiliated with one of these countries please do not be insulted. I'm just looking over the suggested usages of offshore entities in websites from my research).<br>
><br>
> One example of mine: One company that I use for internet services is registered in Cyprus. When I first setup payments for this service, the payments were initially blocked by my bank, and I had to intervene by phone to get the payment released.<br>
><br>
> I am only collecting information on possibilities at the moment, this is not an announcement of any specific plans.<br>
><br>
> :rkent<br>
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</p>