I think you've expressed a good reason to do it like that, and Ryan Ternier has stated a good reason not to
my answer would probably be something of a cop-out, along the lines of business objects and DAOs should probably have different shapes because they serve different needs, and what you're describing seems like two parallel layers of objects that just proxy one another
put another way, if you have Order and Customer DAOs, I wouldn't assume that you need Order and Customer BOs
@Lao, there's no harm returning an object, or subset of that object for what was used populating the data, but it is nice to have a custom response object.
What @TomW Has said is correct. You have a business rule and from that a set of requirements to do what you need to do. Your process (code) is fulfilling those requirements.
If you have an XML message/object that needs to be validated etc, there's no harm in using that to pass it on
IMHO if your presentation is calling stuff like CustomerBusinessObject.Save(), the business object is insufficiently abstract for the needs of the view
@TomW I'm not sure I understand this. If there's a web method titled "AddCustomer", wouldn't it make sense to construct a customer and call a Save method? I mean, I would rather create a factory that would instantiate and save the BO, but that's essentially a simplification of the same thing.
if you phone microsoft just them the truth, or what I tell them when I do my yearly new install "I do an install every year, and you always give me grief about these damn keys. I don't have time to keep doing this.. "ok sir, here you go"