It seems, from a first-hand report [+], that the police thought the renters of the coworking space were employees of the company running the coworking space. i.e. They were looking for garden variety "immigrants working without a work-capable visa" rather than digital nomads specifically.
That said, I've run into a lot of folks like this over the years (something about the combination of being in software and being a white guy in Asia), and my advice is always the same: go the extra mile and get your paperwork in order. If you cannot do this in your country of choice, find a new country of choice. Business is stressful enough without having to be constantly worried whether today is the day you're going to get arrested/deported.
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[ 2.7 ms ] story [ 18.4 ms ] threadThat said, I've run into a lot of folks like this over the years (something about the combination of being in software and being a white guy in Asia), and my advice is always the same: go the extra mile and get your paperwork in order. If you cannot do this in your country of choice, find a new country of choice. Business is stressful enough without having to be constantly worried whether today is the day you're going to get arrested/deported.
+ http://www.johnnyfd.com/2014/09/live-updates-immigration-cra...
http://ashleyconnor.co.uk/blog/2014/09/07/the-digital-nomad-...
The good news in this case is that everyone was let go without charge.
I'd still advocate caution. Thai law is flexible and sometimes what is tolerated today is not ok tomorrow.