I must admit, this is convincing. It really is. It sounds so good, but not exactlygood. It looks really good, it appears to be really good, and it caters to what so many of us want so badly without hassle.

BitCo bitcoin bank accounts.

No, not the Chase account you open last month. That's not what I am talking about, what I am referring to is a financial business account for a bitcoin based business or trading practice. There are only a few large banks that will even think about working with these types of accounts and a few smaller banks that are specialized. In some countries there are none or it's illegal for banks to even work with these companies or digital currency at all.

The additional requirement, in many countries, to obtain and maintain licensing, registration, and compliance protocols make this task even more difficult. We recently posted an article on the problem this is causing in the United States and just last month Australia's largest banks shut down accounts of more than 17 bitcoin based companies, forcing some to leave the country and leaving others unemployed.

Wonder Boy to the Rescue!

Enter Mr. Dim Voloshinsky. He, PR extraordinaire Simon Peltin, and enough staff to support a global presence in 7 countries spanning across 50 languages and offering just about every financial service ever created in the history of mankind, plan to just go ahead and knock this issue out in a couple months.

NextBank’s mission is to provide advanced banking services for Bitcoin and cryptocurrency users worldwide. NextBank will offer international Debit Cards, accounts denominated in both fiat such as USD and various cryptocurrencies, SWIFT transfers, an escrow service, currency exchange, and much more.

Supporting 135+ currencies, cryptocurrencies, and precious metals

Secure, but not redundant. 3-Factor Authentication. 100% online.

The fastest intra-bank and SWIFT transfers. Less then 90 minutes

Supporting freelancers, investors, e-commerce, self employment, and brokers, MSB & FX

P2P, C2B, B2B, B2C

Expedited Transfer

Best currency exchange rates

Escrow Services

International debit cards

A Closer Look

I really wanted to believe this and dug through the website, looked up a few things, and nothing was apparent at first leading me to think "perhaps this organization is going to make an actual attempt at this".





However, the shares offered [100 per share] equate to 25 million USD. That's it. Yet they are going to do all of the above and do it in 7 countries. Those are listed as the United Kingdom, France, Germany, Spain, China, Malaysia, and Russia



How are they going to manage this with 25 million when 100's of banks failed last year traditionally with about that same amount of funding. The average bank requires between 10 and 30 million to even open the door, and the way this offering has been presented would be more like that of a credit union, but they are not offering anything of the sort.





Let's take a look at what you get if you invest in some of these share, and although not a smoking gun, it certainly is suspicious. You get ... nothing . Ding ding ding ding ding.... no jackpot here.





There are no ROI forecasts either. No market studies, no product outlines, and really not much of anything. They say your account will be open and you'll get support, but I noticed they said nothing about the ability to withdraw any funds. Perhaps that is really a sick joke of some sort because this is apparently a one-way only transaction.





I took a look at the " shareholder portal " (they plan to let you see the money you are never going to get back) which seemed to make it all look even more authentic, but since I didn't have a registration number, I couldn't login. That's when it hit me, somewhere I had seen a company registration number.





The Illusion Runs Deep

The Vanuatu corporate registration number is at the very bottom of the page on the main website. Which is odd. Who does that? Why do that? It's just like those half-ass companies that put BBB on their websites.





We checked it out, and sure enough. It really is a company in Vanuatu.





To solidify this as an actual possibility goes further in that the website extension is .vu, which is only available to Vanuatu entities and Vanuatu is home to over 60 banks contributing the second largest part of its economy next to tourism.





Website, contact information, registration papers, the press release, and a few other items pretty much summed it all up. This is legitimate.





Or is it?





I couldn't get passed the missing information. For everything that is present, there's about 5 things that are not present.





Let's Play Peel The Onion!



Layer #1, The 25 million





The first thing noticed of course was the 25 million. The amount is just too small to pull off what they want to do. However, that was not enough since they might have had stages planned. Poor explanation and shady investment marketing, but not a smoking gun.





Layer #2 - The Countries





In quarter two of 2016 they plan to open globally in these listed 7 Countries: United Kingdom, France, Germany, Spain, China, Malaysia, and Russia.





So they are next door to Australia and New Zealand, and no support there, but they are going to support Russia and China?





The problem is that Digital currencies are not allowed in Chinese banks and they are completely illegal in Russia.





Two of the largest countries on earth have laid down these laws, yet these guys have worked through this issue and they will be just fine to operate? They must have spent years on this, or the more likely scenario, absolutely no time at all because this isn't happening.





Layer #3 - No Compliance





There is not a single word of compliance. To pull something like this off you would need an army of compliance staff. They do not even mention it and anyone in the banking world knows that this is as important as the funding itself.





Layer #4 - The Languages





They are going to support 50 languages. They tout on their website how they are just (going to be) a phone call away as well. Some entire governments can't even support 50 languages. This is possible, but not probable on the proposed shoe-string budget being promoted and a budget that most startup banks can barely manage supporting more than one or two.





Layer #5 - Twitter





The NextBank twitter account has 46,000 followers, compared to Facebook's version of it's presence that has 1,000 (and I bet this will mysteriously be thousands soon too). The problem is that this time last month, they didn't have any. They didn't have any a couple weeks ago either, they just magically appeared in what was an obvious paid boost.





Layer #6 - The Website Itself





The "shareholder portal" has a striking similarity to another website that we will discuss in a minute, but the press center is more laughable. It's a Wordpress free template. The "Clean White Wordpress Theme" by Mazznoer. This dude http://mazznoer.web.id/, although that is not really any evidence, but the content is.





Layer #6.1 - Lack Thereof 1 (Languages)





They claim to support 50 languages, but there are only 5 supported for the press release. If this is not a scam, then it is certainly very poor marketing. You shouldn't make your vast language offering a selling point and then not support it when marketing your "50 language support" offering as a selling point.





Layer #6.2 - Domain Age





The domain age always is a kicker. This one is no different. Wouldn't you know it, the website was just registered on October 20th.





Courtesy domain-records-lookup.com





Layer #6.3 - Lack Thereof 2 (Security)





They brag about their amazing Three Factor Authentication (3Auth), yet when you visit the investment portal, which would obviously contain sensitive information, it's 0Auth. Ok maybe it's 1Auth since it has a user/pass combo, but I suspect it's really 0Auth and doesn't even work.





Layer #7 - The Founder





Lucky number 7 is the one and only. The owner/founder himself.





It's certainly not unheard of for someone to be hard to locate, but the founding member, or members, of a banking institution would likely have a long history and years of experience in the industry. So it's almost impossible that they be all that difficult to find.





We couldn't find a trace of Mr. Dim Voloshinsky and for good reason. He doesn't exist.





Mr. Dim Voloshinsky is actually Dmitrijs Volosinskis, a 24 year old from London with absolutely no experience in banking and very little experience in digital currency. In fact we weren't able to find that Volosinskis has experience in much of anything.





He started a company called Thinkcomfy ltd in 2009, where he was a Director (at age 18 mind you). It has since been dissolved leaving not a trace of actually having done anything at all and the address is a home in London.





ItraGlobal ltd (not the IT firm, another vapor firm) was his next gig and is still in existence but also has no evidence of actually doing anything. He is also listed as a director of a company called Satoshi Partners ltd and has been for the last 2 months (at the time of this writing), quite possibly the origin of NextBank.





different) website as well, this one we tried to buy some bitcoin here), take a look at the sign-in screen. Then go back and look at the "shareholder portal" on the NextBank website. You'll see the similarity and what the aforementioned item at the beginning of layer #6 was all about. He is not without another () website as well, this one http://www.bitcoin123.com , which we found very interesting. Setting aside the fact that it doesn't work (), take a look at the sign-in screen. Then go back and look at the "" on the NextBank website. You'll see the similarity and what the aforementioned item at the beginning of layer #6 was all about.





The Ugly Verdict

Given all of the above, and as much as I personally wanted this to be true, it's not . This is a scam!





In addition to the above evidence, Simon the PR guy doesn't exist either, and the CEO (who we did find, and likely unaware of the appointment) who was reported as the former head of Vanuatu Private Bank, certainly sounds impressive ... until you realize that this bank does not exist either.





Even if this guy was for real and sincerely wanted to open this bank, it would not work the way that he has presented it and in some of the countries he wants to open up in it's not even possible at all.





This was a better presentation than most scams, it had some very convincing things in place and it struck a nerve being something many in the industry would like to see. This idea could certainly be done, but not by a someone with no experience in doing anything like this, not for 25 million, and at the moment, certainly not in Russia or China.





Unfortunately this is a scam. Even if it wasn't, it would be a piss-poor investment since it fails before it begins and will never exist. It is, however, a good way to make your money not exist.



Avoid NextBank.





Besides, would you really want to trust your money to a chap named Dim anyway?





























Story by dinbits

Published at 10:09 PST on 10/26/2015























































