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What Happens When Kickstarter Projects Fail After Funding?

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It was only a matter fo time before the Kickstarter horror stories hit.

“Kickstarter scammers cheat backers out of $344,000” screams the headline on The Daily Dot.

The article tells the tale of 2,106 Kickstarter backers who funded the ZionEyez HD video recording glasses for Facebook, and a year later have nothing to show for their money.

The ZionEyez team, headed by Joe Taylor of Seattle has cut communication after collecting nearly $300,000 in backer money, leaving behind a Kickstarter page of angry comments.

ZionEyez Failed Kickstarter

A look at the failed ZionEyez Kickstarter project.

It appears that the ZionEyez team underestimated costs associated with bringing the Facebook video recording glasses to the market, and may be seeking traditional investors, but remains mum on a release date.

Kickstarter facilitates refunds on failed projects, but won’t force the refunds. In this case there is simply no money for Kickstarter to refund as it is in the hands of the ZionEyez team and possibly already spent.

While some backers are looking for legal recourse, others are considering stronger methods for recourse like, Lawrence Ky who offers another crowdfunding project to “find Joe Taylor and his pals and hammer them to an inch of their lives.”

There are some users on zionkick, a blog dedicated to following the failed project, who report attempting a chargeback with tier bank, but it is not clear if this will succeed.

This is a sad reminder that funding a project on Kickstarter is not like buying a product on Amazon. If the project tanks after full funding there is nothing users can do to ensure a refund. Projects like iPen and the Sarah Alarm Clock have offered refunds when production issues delayed the project or caused the project to fail.

I will continue to fund projects on Kickstarter, but it’s worth keeping stories like this in mind when using Kickstarter.

3 Comments

3 Comments

  1. Uncle Mikey

    05/30/2012 at 7:29 am

    Caveat Investor (or Donor, depending on how you want to look at it).

    If you see Kickstarter as a kind of investment (which, technically, it isn’t — you do not create a legally vested interest by giving a KS project money), then you should remember to always be careful what you invest in, do your own due diligence, and put your money where your trust is, not in what seems like it might be cool.

    If you see Kickstarter as a kind of donation (which is what it actually is) or like a PBS/NPR pledge (since you do get premium kickbacks for your donation), then…guess what? You still should do your own due diligence, and you still should only put your money where your trust is.

    Kickstarter is pretty clear, if you actually read what they’re about, that there are no guarantees of success in any project they facilitate. It’s up to you to choose wisely what to do with your money.

  2. rainman

    05/31/2012 at 7:08 am

    I agree with @Uncle Mikey. It is not much different from putting some money into a ‘hot’ stock tip. It might be great, it might fail. That’s just risk vs. reward. In this case, the reward is just ‘firsties’ or some other small value-added benefits rather than more valuable dividends. It never occurred to me to look at donating to kickstarter project as a consumer. This article surprised me that some are. Pretty short-sighted in my opinion. Also, makes me hesitate more to put up an idea I had for project. It’s a long-shot, too, so if I fail will I have thousands of people after me? Kickstarter has been a great tool to get ideas off the ground. How many ideas will remain in hiding if this kind of mentality persists?

  3. Magnetic iPhone

    07/11/2012 at 10:43 am

    I have been fortune in my kickstarter backing thus far, and would say that overall the projects come through with their reward promises.

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