P411 requires either two recent reviews on a verified review site such as TER, or vouches from two client members of P411, who are paid members in good standing and have okays from at least five providers. If reviews are used, the reviewers must have written at least five other reviews.
Additionally, it requires government ID, a selfie holding that ID, and a selfie holding today’s newspaper. They are not running background checks or doing anything with that information, except verifying that the person is of legal age. There is no way around this component for providers.
I don’t believe Eros did any video. They did require me to submit my identification and, for any faceless photo I submitted, I had to submit a version of it that included my face, so that they could match that against my verification selfie.
Getting “Eros verified,” though, just meant that I took a piece of paper and wrote down “EROS.com” and maybe my name and date on it, and took a selfie.
All of these sites require an ID and a selfie at this point. The question is simply whether scammers can pay random women to make accounts and then hand off the information. P411 makes this almost prohibitively difficult by requiring reviews or vouchers from members who are not new.