-Pushbrk
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What I meant was; Fall under the vague definition of what constitutes a Marriage Broker.
After reading the wording over and over, I think it is worded loosely for a reason and that reason is to include any dating agency which facilitates the "American coming" in contact with the foreigner, whether it is face to face or by "other means".
You may think all these companies selling contact info are exempt because they are not involved in physically bringing people together but it comes down to the definition of "Meeting".
If two people "Meet" via email through a web site, is not that web-site a facilitator?
What is the practical difference between me walking into a agency looking through their catalog, paying 30 bucks for meeting a local lady or me doing the same thing with the same business on the internet from a hotel room down the block?
It all amounts to the same thing and if you are correct, it is even easier to skirt the law than I thought.
At this point a couple can claim they met on yahoo chat and how could it be disproved?
If you are correct the agencies only need to eliminate the storefront part of the business for USA customers.[/quote]
What we have here is a failure to communicate.

Words mean things. The IMB definition in the law, in and of itself is vague but there are other paragraphs that further clarify what is NOT an IMB. The exceptions DO exclude some business concerns who facilitate USC's meeting foreign nationals. The discussion is about which ones. You seem to disregard the exceptions out of hand. That's not useful to a meaningful discussion on the subject, IMO.
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Businesses which do not provide international dating as a primary principle of business.
Do you really think the people who wrote this law did not study the various business models which exist in the Mail order bride field?
They were not going to let the law only cover Marriage agencies but rather any and every means that businesses use to facilitate men meeting foreign ladies.
Perhaps someone could offer websites which they feel are not of such nature that a person could answer *NO* to question 19 after reading the above?
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You have misquoted the line beginning with "businesses" above. If you quote it correctly, and interpret it literally, you'll see why Yahoo and the website I described and used are not IMBs.
Those are two examples of the many. You're welcome.

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Unfortunately the document would not allow me to copy and paste, hence my shortened version.
I never at any time said Yahoo or similar US sites were considered Marriage brokers, in fact I pointed out several times they did not fall under that classification, and I mentioned the fact that a person could "Claim" to have met through that exact site to eliminate answering "YES" on question 19......so I am not sure how I left you with that impression.
I am inclined to agree with Turboguy that a site such as "freepersonals.ru" is exempt too because it charges NO fees.