I'm not aware of anything specific to Mexico on this, but I do know that some countries have strange laws that cover accounting practices, banking transactions, etc. I went through it with some customers from India a while back, and finally just decided it wasn't worth the hassle.
Thursday, Thursday, December 06, 2001, 6:02:36 AM, Toxik - Fabian Rodriguez wrote: > Hello, > We are a corporation based in Canada and one of our customers in Mexico has > adressed a request I wanted your opinion on. > He has registered a number of domains with us (we are an RSP) and is now > requesting us to re-issue his invoices under a different company name > (invoices dated as old as 1 yr.). He also demands those invoices to indicate > that prices are in CDN$ and to be signed by hand by the person that does the > invoices (mind you, there is no "person doing invoices" here! it's automatic > and anybody can...). > Anyways, I just wanted to know if anybody has dealt with customers in > Mexico, what are the rules/regulations of invoicing there, is this something > required by law in Mexico ? How much would you charge for this if you have > to do it ? > Currently *all* of our customers are invoiced via email, and we charge a > minimum of CDN$5 per request of printing and sending an invoice/statement. > Any and all comments appreciated. > Fabian Rodriguez - Toxik Technologies Inc. > www.Toxik.com - OpenPGP ID: 0x5AF2A4D5 -- Best regards, William X Walsh <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> -- Webcertificates.info SSL Certificates for resellers from $49ea
