Think about it this way. If a seedbank is really good, they don't need to advertise in High Times. It's a word of mouth business. The seedbanks that have advertised in the past, no longer exist. Ask Marc Emory, Neville Schoenmaker, ect. When The Seed Bank was at its peak in the mid to late '80s, the USA government went after Neville. Even though he lived in Holland and was aussie. He wound up going back to australia for 20 year old drug crimes. All of this was USA pressure. Marc was canadian, and USA pressure put him in prison as well. So seed banks that draw aolt of attention to themselves are bound to either not really sell seeds, or are looking to get busted. Would you want your name and address from their computer to be found? Smaller, more discreet bean merchants are a much better choice.