That's a bit hard to do, since you are essentially a new account and there's no reason anyone would trust your "licence".
And is there even a need for a licence in the space? Trustworthy exchanges will have their calculation code open for everyone, then knowledgeable people will go through the code for free and post about it in forums.
If something bad is found, it'll circulate the internet quickly, a customer only needs to search for it.
Essentially what we do is work with game developers who have interesting games. We license the games (get permission to use them under contract) and then offer those games to end users under a gambling license.
A gambling license is a joke. It is as good as the concept of democracy in Sudan. Every reputed gambling service on this forum is trustworthy because of the way they function and their reputation, not because of their gambling license provider. A developer selling the game to the operator or you selling it to them wouldn't make any difference. As a developer, I prefer selling the games I've developed to the operator directly.
Licensing, in this case, refers to permission to use a game, such as licensing devans' bustabit code and running your own bustabit. It has nothing to do with any Curaco/random country licenses.
It is permission to use the game under contract and to offer those games under an actual gambling license to operators as a package.
A gambling license is a joke. It is as good as the concept of democracy in Sudan. Every reputed gambling service on this forum is trustworthy because of the way they function and their reputation, not because of their gambling license provider. A developer selling the game to the operator or you selling it to them wouldn't make any difference. As a developer, I prefer selling the games I've developed to the operator directly.
I guess you need to decide what works for you.
Some of our clients have families that they care about and operating under a licensed entity allows them to sleep at night.
Unfortunately, government agencies are not interested in whether or not your games are "trustworthy or not", they want to regulate the market which means they want to tell you, what you can or can not do. So if you are found to be offering your games to unlicensed entities, it could be seen as "aiding and abetting".