From what I've read they ask for 2 bills of any kind and not for your id's to keep your privacy. They only do this to recognize that you're a Dutch citizen.
On the other hand, like you said there might be a part that does not trust it and won't redeem their coins. In my point of view this is a good way to check whether you are a citizen for a fair distribution.
Agreed and that's not what I'm worrying about (so much). It's the part where the DB/inbox/application/whatever containing those proof of residence docs gets (w)hacked and our residential data gets scattered around the interwebs. So many people 'trusted' (read $$$) MtGox with their personal data. After all the recent events, would you still trust them with your home address?
Edit: I'd reccon you'll get the fairest distribution and the most trading power for this coin if you distribute it along people other then forum-lurking-altcoin-collecting-miners-with-no-money-to-share (no offence and including myself
). The sollution is fairly I easy I think. Just suit some people up, make the coins portable (paper wallet, USB stick) and go to different AH's in the major cities. Give those coins/wallet to the families/people and tell them a nice story about CryptoCoins. Combine that with maybe a Android wallet app, QR codes, or whatever - could be as simple as a redeem ticket. Maybe even put up a stand with a 25 gulden look-a-like bill.
What's left to do is finding out which laws apply when you set down your distributionpoint.
What, your point being?
You think a scam can't mix with an .com domain?
You'd rather put your faith in a .tk (lol, i wrote the 'dot dot tk' here and I got a 'suspicious link removed') or .info address?
Ofcourse, anything is possible given you have the time and patience to set everything up correctly (and break more then one law in the process). However a .com address has fairly strict policies about it's registar data. Not like a .nl address where you can just have that data masked by your hosting provider.