Was it any good?
Do you mean the Amanda Palmer's album?
I don't know, I'm not a fan of her music. My friend, who is a fan told me about her kickstarter and even there were some unpleasant occurrences, but I don't know much about it.
Was it any good?
But none of those uses for money are illegal in and of themselves. Businesses do pay money to incorporate. busineses do pay rent. Businesses do pay to move employees.
If part of what it takes to produce something is to work full time on it, that heavily implies that a chunk of the KS money is paying for the worker's rent, food, etc.
Nobody's arguing otherwise. But in this case, the Kickstarter was cancelled. It's not that some of the funds went to specific costs, it's that the whole thing was cancelled and nobody got anything. The creator has said he'll try to refund everyone, but it doesn't look likely.
The biggest concern I have is already happening. Kickstarter has changed their terms of service so that the project needs to refund backers if the project cannot deliver the rewards.
If your kickstarted project includes a reward that is an output of the project (board game, device, etc) then that converts Kickstarter into a preorder store. It shifts all risk away from the backers (no longer investors, they're just purchasers) and onto the project. Worse, you need to refund more money than you received, because you also need to refund the money that Amazon and Kickstarter took as part of their cut.
That means that projects are going to take on less risk and go for sure things. We've seen how well that works in Hollywood, right?
If nothing else, the point of my devil's advocacy is that KS needs to expect/require projects to be more clear on how they're going to spend the money. There's probably got to be some room for unexpected expenses, but paying to move an employee is rather pricey when you can probably get an employee where the project owner already is. So that kind of expense wouldn't be on the declared list of primary expenses, and thus you'd have breach of contract or some other lawyerly sueful offense.
The KS site itself may not require these things, but the people investing in the KS projects probably should.
I've been expecting a Kickstarter backlash pretty much since the start. I'm still sure it's coming. However, I don't think this will be the cause of the backlash, nor even particularly accelerate it - it's just one more bit of pressure against the dam.
I don't know if you guys know who Amanda Palmer is
I guess then some kind of contingency plan should be in order.
Let's say you need 20.000$ to print and ship and somewhere along the way you fall short.
If your digital book pledge costs 20$ and your pledge with a printed book and shipping costs 50$ and you waste 10.000$
you can still give people a digital edition with some refund.
You still won't print and a lot of people will be angry but it's still better than canceling the whole thing and facing charges.