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Comment Re:Not a new idea - and 24 nm, not 12 nm (Score 1) 332

UNCLOS Article 33 states:

1. In a zone contiguous to its territorial sea, described as the contiguous zone, the coastal State may exercise the control necessary to:
(a) prevent infringement of its customs, fiscal, immigration or sanitary laws and regulations within its territory or territorial sea;
(b) punish infringement of the above laws and regulations committed within its territory or territorial sea.,
2. The contiguous zone may not extend beyond 24 nautical miles from the baselines from which the breadth of the territorial sea is measured.

Essentially, the 12 to 24 NM area is a "hot pursuit zone". Earning a wage 12.1NM from shore is perfectly legal.

Comment Re:Not a new idea (Score 2) 332

In 2010, there were 298,187 B1 and B2 visas granted to Indian nationals, 508,968 to Chinese ones, 83k to Philippines etc., for a total of 3.68M B1/B2 visas - http://www.travel.state.gov/xls/FY10NIVDetailTable.xls

Since an individual needs a US visa to get to San Francisco in order to board the Blueseed vessel, they'll be able to come back on shore as long as they spend less than 180 days a year on the mainland.

In case of severe storm or other emergency, the ship can come to shore under force majeure and preserve its jurisdiction, which will be an open registry state like Malta or The Bahamas.

Comment We've done some homework... (Score 1) 332

Regrettably, the OP didn't include a link to our FAQ, which would have cleared up many concerns.

We'll be anchored 12 nautical miles (22 km) offshore. The water depth is around 250ft, as can be seen on Google Earth.

For internet connectivity, we'll be using solutions similar to the Ubiquity Solution radios and antennas - range 75km, bandwidth 150Mbps per combo. Satellite backup from Skycasters (6Mbps/1.5Mbps) is only $100/mo as long as your main line is up.

One of the accommodation barges we're thinking of is 190m x 45m.

SwedishChef, given your experience, we're definitely interested in your constructive input. Drop us a line if you'd like at http://blueseed.co/contact-us.html

Comment We have an FAQ (Score 1) 332

"Why not telecommute" is a good question, which we address in our FAQ - http://www.blueseed.co/faq.html#silicon_valley, http://www.blueseed.co/faq.html#telepresence

Incidentally, since you mention Vancouver,

In November 2011, ABC News reported on the story of Amit Aharoni, an Israeli startup entrepreneur who, after creating 9 American jobs, received a letter from the US Citizenship and Immigration Serice (USCIS) denying his visa request and notifying him to leave the country immediately. Aharoni left for Vancouver and tried to run his company (an online cruise booking service) remotely via Skype. That didn't quite work out, so he set to work on making his story public. After ABC World News picked up the story, USCIS reversed their decision within 24 hours. The moral is that running a startup remotely can be big enough of a pain to warrant mounting a media campaign, and that unless they manage to attract massive media attention, a startup entrepreneur without a valid visa may have to relocate their operations outside of the U.S.

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