It may sound weird calling certain KYC requirements normal or standard, but from what I can see on that chopped screenshot of yours, it looks pretty standard to me.
The appropriate way to label it would be common or standard since those tend to go along, but to call it normal is not correct. Things that are not normal can be temporarily common for whatever reason, KYC is a cancer that must be abolished.
I guess they asked you to hold your ID together with a piece of paper with a date and perhaps name of the exchange written on it. I have heard that many times. It's pretty standard. Buying newspapers and standing in front of address signs isn't. Since when is a scan of a recent utility bin not enough to prove your address, for example.
That is the thing, it was never real proof of anything to begin with -- it is trivially faked. You can create any utility bin yourself, or better if you have the PDF of a real utility bill that is used in some place then you can edit that more accurately with even less time investment. The whole thing was a joke and in most cases could be easily gamed, it is just that most users are honest and wouldn't game it anyway. It never served any purpose to begin with at all. To make things worse, with AI neither video verification is good enough in most cases at all -- these things are completely pointless.
You can create a fake ID, fake utility bill and a fake person on a video and
register someone who doesn't even exist. This is not theoretical theatrics as it would be from a regular respondent, I check these things regularly as part of my work. It does work if done properly. The hardest part for the average user may be hijacking the video feed of phone camera if the service in question only allows video verification on the phone.
Yeah until you see other requests..like I mentioned, that was just one out of many and it was kinda ridiculous because I have my account verified already(as in all necessary verification). They didn’t give a reasonable explanation but the funds was actually from my self-custody wallet.
Since when is a scan of a recent utility bin bill not enough to prove your address, for example.
Most don’t even accept this for verification anymore but could request it if you’re opt into similar “extra” verifications.
As things continue to get regularly and more easily bypassed you are going to see more and more ridiculous asks when it comes to verification. The problem is that the services have to do it, they are not given a choice by the law. However, the prospect of having KYC abolished or even just paused for some time is extremely low -- even if it doesn't work at all.