I'm just saying: There is not a person in the world I find that trustworthy that it outweighs the long shot chance of any of the other eventualities occurring. Of course, this is a estimation made by me, but I'm highly confident I'm correct.
Let me note I'm just replying to try and help you. That's why I gave constructive feedback for an alternative for which I do see added value (and therefore a business opportunity).
Thanks. I guess we have to make the exceptions, that some people might be trustworthy, and by default, almost everyone is not, as a sort of rule. In this world, it all boils down to reputation and identity or persona, and how valuable it is perceived to be compared to what is going to be secured or deposited.
The question turns into, how much bitcoins will you entrust in this service? With this particular operator?
Your alternative turns into a local service. Which means the paper wallet is stored at the owners location. They just need help to withdraw their secured bitcoins. That could work. They can go to you, or the ones near me can go to me (although I find that unlikely, but hey, I do know some people with money who don't know a thing about computers.)
Everyone else around the world can come to me and others like me who might be offering a similar service. I see this as something like the localbitcoins thing, where a bunch of individuals located all over will be offering something like this.
Again, it boils down to how much you'd trust that person.
Thanks for the feedback. I'd like to poke as much holes as possible, and then see if this can actually work. My guess is that people in the US will want an "offshore" bitcoin paper wallet service or something along those lines.
And of course, everyone else who knows what they are doing don't need this service.