Originally Posted by
RichardKenner
I'm confused where that line is as well and would have thought there wasn't an issue. If I'm Canadian and form an IT consulting company, I can have clients anywhere in the world and still be working in Canada (for my own company). If a client in the US has a problem and I choose to help them solve the problem by using technology such as WebEx, I'm still working for my Canadian company with them as a client, not working for them. If instead I choose to cross the border and do exactly the same thing while on-site, as far as I'm concerned, my legal status is the same: I'm working for my Canadian company conducting business in the US, but not working for the US company.
FB?
This is excetly what I explained to the officer but they claim "As long as I am conducting the business in US, then I need working permit or visa"