We are actively exploring partnerships in several areas where business and regulatory interests intersect. The following outlines key areas where preliminary conversations are welcome, and where we seek to co-develop compliant models with the help of legal counsel:
1. Commission & Revenue Sharing with Contractors (e.g., AT&T Partner Sales)
What we’re open to discussing:
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Sharing portions of our commissions with low voltage contractors who support fulfillment and servicing of contracts we close (e.g., network installs, hardware setups, etc.).
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Creating structured agreements that compensate subcontractors for service-based contributions without violating telecom channel partner or reseller rules.
Key gray area:
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Clarifying how to structure payments as service remuneration rather than sales commissions to avoid triggering unauthorized agent or reseller designations.
2. Referral and Business Development Incentives
What we’re open to discussing:
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Allowing contractors and service professionals to refer their existing business clients to us and receive compensation.
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Designing ethical and transparent referral fee structures that comply with anti-kickback laws and reseller program terms.
Key gray area:
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Ensuring that referrals are not structured as commissions on regulated services or offerings unless clearly authorized.
3. Employee Participation in Investor Relations (Non-Brokered Roles)
What we’re open to discussing:
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Allowing internal employees or trusted contractors to help communicate the value of our business model to prospective investors (friends, family, associates), without receiving commission-based pay.
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Structuring bonuses or fixed pay based on performance or milestones — but not based on the investment amount.
Key gray area:
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Avoiding activities that require broker-dealer registration, such as direct solicitation for securities with transaction-based pay.
4. Mining Pool Participation as a Basis for Pre-Existing Relationships (506(b) Offerings)
What we’re open to discussing:
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Inviting participants in our mining pool to opt in to deeper business engagement, including discussions about future investment offerings.
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Developing internal relationship logs and KYC processes to ensure that any future invitations to invest are based on pre-existing, substantive relationships.
Key gray area:
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Ensuring that communication with miners about future offerings remains private and individualized, not a form of general solicitation under SEC rules.
️ Legal Next Steps
Each of these areas represents an opportunity to create a collaborative relationship — but they also involve regulatory boundaries that must be clearly defined in writing. After initial discussions, we will:
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Present agreed-upon terms and expectations to our legal counsel.
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Finalize and formalize all arrangements in compliant contracts that respect relevant securities, telecom, and employment laws.