Here some questions:
a) Do you have a telephone number?
b) Your domain has been registered by a "Tom Hassel" in Norway. There is indeed one Tom Hassel in Norway. When contacted, he didn't know anything about cloudminr. So where could Tom Hassel be found?
c) You write in one post: "cloudminr.io is a Norwegian cloud mining company". However, there is no company registered by this name in Norway. Please explain.
d) The only company in Trondheim with any connection to "Cloud" is a company which is active in candy import.
e) You claim in the registry data that you are located at Olaf Tryggvasonsgate 2B in Trondheim. Nobody at this address knows anything about you or your operation. Please explain.
Should people feel safer with a phone number and an LLC, that is possible to do. However, it would be just as credible as having an email. A phone is a few dollars as well as a registering a company doesn't take longer than week.
This is correct. But in Norway, you have to show your passport or ID if you set up a company. The same is true for a telephone number. If you think it is so cheap: Do it. It will be good for your credibility - especially after you claimed before that a company exists.
Our goal is not to convince people that we are real by creating companies that we won't use. We want people to see the way we operate, pictures of hardware and income that is not calculated by an algorithm unlike many have, while keeping a certain level of privacy. Would you post your facebook account alongside with your bitcoin address, signed? Rarely anyone would.
Again: So why did you claim that a company exists? Now you write it doesn't. And you used fake information for registering your domain. So you think people should invest in you because you will probably post some pictures? You mentioned before that other cloudmining services were fake. But as long as you write inconsistent information for promoting your services, it is very hard to trust you.
Many transparent Bitcoin companies have failed - how many people have got their money back? Exactly.
Not going all public with your business idea that tax office doubts while also not being a citizen lowers the chance of failure, while historically, results of failure don't change regardless of transparency.
Many intransparent Bitcoin companies have failed, too. So you tell us you don't have to be transparent because if you would run away with the investments, people wouldn't get anything back even if you were transparent? That's wicked...